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Kashmiri educator Sabbah Haji granted bail after her arrest for calling Gen Bipin Rawat a war criminal, to be under surveillance for a year

A former director of Haji Public School in Kashmir, Sabbah Haji, has been released on bail after her arrest for calling Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat a war criminal after his tragic death.

Executive Magistrate of Doda district in Jammu & Kashmir ordered her released on bail a few days ago under sections 107 (security for keeping the peace),108 (security for good behaviour from persons disseminating seditious matters) and 151 (arrest to prevent the commission of cognisable offences) of the Code of Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC).

Sabbah Haji was released on bail by the court on personal bond of Rs 50,000, after she submitted a written apology for her post.  

However, Sabbah Haji was ordered to be present at women’s police station in Doda from 12 AM to 2 PM every day for three days, from December 14 to 17. After the three days, she was asked to appear before the Executive Magistrate, Doda. The magistrate also said that law enforcement agencies would monitor her activities for a year.

Sabbah Haji was arrested last week after her defamatory comments on General Rawat after his death in the tragic chopper crash on December 8. In an Instagram post posted on December 9th on her Instagram account named Stand with Kashmir, she had called General Rawat ‘The War Criminal’ in a graphic with a photo of Gen Rawat.

In the accompanying text, she had written, “General Rawat had a history of playing the Indian state’s stooge to near perfection”, with a link to an article by Faheem Hamid Lone on her blog, asking people to read it.

Screenshot of the post by Sabbah Haji

The post had created a widespread outrage on social media, demanding her arrest. There were also demands to shut down Haji Public School at Doda, where she had earlier worked as a director as well as a teacher.

Facing the public outrage on Sabbah’s comments, Haji Public School had issued a statement distancing itself from her comments. In its official Facebook page, the school said that at present Sabbah Haji is not associated with Haji Public School in any official capacity. The statement said, “The Haji Public School management would like to clarify that a recent distasteful media post during the rounds has nothing to do with the school and that the said person has acted in their individual capacity after their tenure with the school ended.

Ms Sabbah Haji is not associated with Haji Public School in any official capacity.”

Sabbah Haji was arrested after complaints were lodged against her by BJYM for cybercrime. Accordingly, an FIR was registered against her at Doda.

Apart from Sabbah Haji two other youths from Doda arrested for defamatory comments after the death of General Rawat were also granted bail. Parvej Ahmed and Atlaf Hussain had made communally provocative comments on social media, where they had celebrated the death.

In August this year, Sabbah Haji had suffered a meltdown after someone had asked whether the National Flag was hoisted at her school on the occasion of Independence day. She had called the possibility rubbish, and said it was not possible as it was Sunday and the school was closed.

Conman Sukhesh Chandrashekhar had bribed ₹1 crore monthly to Tihar Jail staff for luxuries, 10 more Bollywood actresses had visited him

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Multi-millionaire Conman Sukhesh Chandrashekhar posed as senior government officials and bureaucrats while duping Aditi Singh, the wife of the ex co-owner of the pharma giant Ranbaxy, according to reports. Conman Sukhesh had promised Aditi Singh that he would obtain bail for her jailed husband. In the proces, Sukhesh faked the identity of the top bureaucrat in the Home Ministry like Anoop Kumar, including Law Secretary ‘Abhinav’ and a junior Law Ministry officer who handled the discussions regarding the cash payments in obtaining the bail. Aditi Singh also accused Sukhesh of threatening her to pay 200 crores.

According to reports, Sukesh Chandrasekhar who faced several charges against him including the Rs 200 crore extortion case paid a huge bribe to the tune of Rs 1 crore per month during his stay at the Tihar Jail to the jail officials for having unrestricted access to luxury amenities and freedom to spend time with female guests in the jail. Reportedly, apart from Jacqueline Fernandez and Nora Fatehi, Sukhesh received supermodels and Bollywood actresses in jail. Sukhesh also gave “chicken parties” in jail where women were invited. At least 10 other Bollywood actresses reportedly visited Sukhesh, apart from Jacqueline Fernandez and Nora Fatehi

Further, it was revealed from ED sources that Sukesh Chandrasekhar ran the extortion racket from his “plush office” inside the Tihar Jail and mentioned the “office” of jailed Unitech Group owner Sanjay Chandra as his alternate choice. Sanjay Chandra, who got close to Sukhesh was later transferred to a jail in Mumbai following the orders of the Supreme Court.

In yet another revelation, India Today reported on Friday the exclusive chats between Sukesh Chandrashekhar and Nora Fatehi in which the selection of a luxury car was being discussed.

Sukesh Chandrashekhar had asked Nora Fatehi about a Range Rover car in which he said, “Do you like this?” Nora Fatehi then replied with, “Yes, it’s a nice rough use car. It’s cute, it’s a statement car,” Chandrashekhar then further said, “I will show you more options.” It was reported that Sukesh had gifted Nora a BMW car, and her photos with a BMW S-series car worth 64 lakhs had emerged in media.

Sukesh Chandrashekhar also wrote to Nora Fatehi, “I would highly appreciate it if you could speak for a minute to clarify everything. I hope you or your agency are not wondering why this gift. I want to make it clear that it’s not being given with any kind of motive, but only because when you like a person, you give them gifts. Doing it for that reason only, nothing else.”

Furthermore, the audio clips of the investigation obtained by News18 divulged that Sukesh Chandrasekhar accused Jacqueline Fernandez of hiding the truth in her statements to the ED concerning the amount that he transferred to Jacqueline’s sister in the United States. He said,“No, she is not telling the truth. Through Deepak Ramnani (who has also been arrested), I transferred $180,000 and BMW (X5) to Geraldine”. Geraldine is the name of Jacqueline’s elder sister.

Earlier, Pinky Irani who introduced Jacqueline to Sukhesh was arrested by ED under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA). Irani was paid in crores by Sukesh for introducing him to the actress. Jacqueline had faced an eight hour interrogation on December 8 in connection to the case with her statement being recorded under PMLA. As per reports, Jacquilene was again summoned by ED on December 10 and Pinky Irani and Jacqueline were to be interrogated together.

‘We don’t spare all of you a thought until tragedy strikes…my apologies’: Watch Smriti Irani’s heartfelt tribute to wives and families of soldiers

Union Minister Smriti Irani has offered an emotional tribute to soldiers and their families on Friday while apologising on behalf of civilians who she said, seldom acknowledge the sacrifices and challenges posed at the wives and family members of our brave soldiers. She was speaking at the Army Wives Welfare Association’s book festival.

While paying tribute to General Bipin Rawat, the late Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), his wife Madhulika Raje Singh Rawat, and 11 others who died in a helicopter crash in Coonoor on December 8, the women and child development minister shared her thoughts when she saw ‘Madhulikaji on the pyre’. 

“When I saw her in the pyre with General Rawat, as a civilian I thought that we don’t spare all of you thought and when I say all of you, its the wives and the children till such time a tragedy strikes, that you are unacknowledged by us and for that, you have my apology, that we see you only when you step up to take the posthumous honour that is conferred upon your loved ones. We shower you with petals when a man in uniform comes back in a box. We never acknowledge the challenges that you as Army man’s wife face. We assume that you have chosen this life but today as a civilian I say sorry and also express my gratitude,” said the union minister thanking the families of the soldiers for the unbridled sacrifices made by them for the country.

India’s first CDS General Bipin Rawat, his wife Madhulika Raje Singh Rawat, and 11 others were killed on December 8 when an Indian Air Force (IAF) chopper crashed near Coonor in Tamil Nadu in an air tragedy that shocked the three services and came as a huge setback to the country’s biggest military reforms since Independence.

The only survivor of the crash, Group Captain Varun Singh, died on Wednesday. The last rites of the fallen soldier were performed with full state and military honours in Bhopal on Friday.

Sony Sports posts offensive Tweet against Gautam Gambhir and PM Modi as the former cricketer is appointed as mentor for Lucknow IPL franchise

Soon after the former India opening batter and Kolkata Knight Riders’ (KKR) captain, Gautam Gambhir was roped in by the new Lucknow Indian Premier League (IPL) franchise as the team’s mentor, Sony Sports Network, owned by Sony Pictures Networks India, posted an extremely disparaging post against the former cricket icon, who is also a BJP MP.

The screenshot of the Tweet by Sony Sports, which the channel quietly deleted shortly after posting it, was shared on the micro-blogging site by popular social media user @iMac_too.

In the now-deleted post, Sony Sports wrote: “Clearly Supreme Leader is not paying this dude enough of money”. The Tweet was posted in response to a Tweet by a user @CricCrazyJohns in which the latter informed that Gautam Gambhir had been appointed as the mentor of the Lucknow IPL franchise.

Since Gautam Gambhir is a member of the Bhartiya Janata Party, Sony Sports implied that the ‘Supreme Leader,’ in an obvious reference to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is not paying the former cricketer enough, thus, compelling him to take up the post as the new head coach of the Lucknow IPL team.

The sports network discreetly deleted the Tweet minutes after it was posted, without giving any explanation or apology for its insensitive and rather unnecessary remark.

Meanwhile, Gautam Gambhir took to Twitter to thank Sanjiv Goenka and the RPSG Group for considering him for the post. “Thanks a lot to Dr Goenka and the RPSG Group for presenting me this wonderful opportunity in their setup. “The fire to win a contest still burns bright inside me, the desire to leave a winner’s legacy still kicks me 24×7. I will not be contesting for a dressing room but for the spirit and soul of Uttar Pradesh,” Gambhir said in his Tweet.

The owner of the yet to be named franchise, Sanjiv Goenka welcomed Gambhir into the RPSG family. “Gautam has an impeccable career record. I respect his cricketing mind and look forward to working with him,” he said.

The Lucknow franchise is one of the new teams in the IPL along with Ahmedabad.

Along with Gautam Gambhir, the Sanjiv Goenka franchise has also brought in former Zimbabwe captain Andy Flower as the head coach. Flower was previously assisting Anil Kumble at the Punjab Kings. Reports also suggest that the new franchise, which was bought by RP Sanjiv Goenka group for a whopping sum of Rs 7090 crore is expected to rope in KL Rahul as the new team captain.

Maharashtra: Angry monkeys exact revenge by killing 250 dogs after a puppy kills a baby monkey

A bizarre incident has come to pass in Maharashtra’s Beed, where a clan of revenge-driven monkeys killed 250 dogs by dropping them down from buildings and treetops. The unseen fury had its roots from an incident in which a pack of dogs mauled a baby monkey to death.

This baffling occurrence took place in Majalgaon in Beed district, a rustic town located 300 miles east of state capital Mumbai. As per local reports, the killing spree started after a few dogs killed an infant monkey and since then, consumed by the fire of revenge, a troop of primates has gone on a rampage, catching puppies and dropping them from considerable heights to their miserable deaths. According to villagers, close to 250 dogs have been killed in the district in the last one month.

In Lavool, a village 10 kilometers away from Majalgaon not but one pup is left. The residents of the village lodged complaint against the menace of monkeys with forest department officials. The forest officials visited the place but were unable to catch a single monkey.

According to the villagers, the monkeys are avenging the death of one of their own. They said the entire episode of monkeys killing dogs started after a pack of dogs killed an infant monkey. Following this incident, enraged primates launched a systematic attack against dogs, abducting them, taking them to abandoned buildings with considerable heights and dropping them from the top.

After almost all dogs were killed by the monkeys, the primates started attacking school-going children in the village. This has created panic among villagers who feared that the monkeys in their bloodlust to avenge death of one of their infants might target children after having killed pups. On the other hand, after failing in their initial attempt to catch the monkeys, the forest department officials came up with an elaborate plan to nab the menacing monkeys. They laid a trap and managed to ensnare the troop of monkeys responsible for killing over 250 dogs in the district.

SG Tushar Mehta to head Centre’s legal team to defend the ban on Zakir Naik’s terror outfit IRF before UAPA tribunal

The Narendra Modi government has notified a seven-member legal team headed by solicitor general Tushar Mehta to defend its decision to ban Zakir Naik’s Islamic Research Foundation (IRF) as an unlawful organization under provisions of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act 1967.

Senior lawyer Sachin Datta, Amit Mahajan, Rajat Nair, Kanu Agrawal, Jay Prakash and Dhruv Pandey are part of the team who will represent the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) before the UAPA tribunal to defend the ban. On November 15, 2021, the Centre extended the ban on IRF headed by Zakir Naik by five more years under Section 3(1) of the UAPA.

Since each such notification of banning any outfit under UAPA is examined by a UAPA tribunal, the Centre has constituted a strong team of lawyers to defend the ban on IRF.  

Earlier on December 13th, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) notified the tribunal headed by Delhi High Court Chief Justice D N Patel under provisions of UAPA for the purpose of adjudicating whether or not grounds are sufficient to impose a ban on IRF as an unlawful association.

The tribunal is expected to take up the hearing of the matter on December 20.

IRF and Naik a threat to national security

IRF is headed by Zakir Naik (55) a radical Islamic preacher, who while promoting Islam always promotes ill-will against India, Hindus and instigates Muslim youths of India and abroad to commit terrorist acts.

Declared as proclaimed offender by the court of the National Investigation Agency, Naik ran away from India in 2016 and moved to Malaysia where he was granted permanent residency. On November 18, 2016, NIA had registered a case against him under various sections of the Indian Penal Code and UAPA, and his outfit was declared an ‘unlawful association’ by the government a day before the NIA registered the case.

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) holding a terror funding probe, charged him for money laundering worth Rs 193.06 Crore and attached his properties worth over Rs 50 Crore.

In the fresh notification, the Centre has said that if the unlawful activities of IRF were not curbed, it would continue to create communal disharmony, propagate anti-national sentiments and support militancy.

Centre has said that his (Naik) speeches and statements are objectionable, subversive that promote enmity, hatred among religious groups that can disrupt the secular fabric of the country. Besides, he instigates youths to indulge in terrorist activities. The activities of IRF are prejudicial to the security of the country.

Naik promotes Islamic terrorism proved beyond doubt

Naik runs two television channels namely Peace TV and Peace TV Urdu which are banned in many countries including India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Canada and the United Kingdom.

But he still has a huge viewership and an investigation of a couple of terrorist attack cases has revealed how he poisoned the mind of youths. His name surfaced in the 2016 Dhaka cafe bombing case. One of the bombers had admitted before told Bangladeshi investigators that he was influenced by the preaching of Naik.

Naik’s name surfaced in connection with the April bombings in Sri Lanka. Zahran Hashim, associated with National Thowheeth Jama’ath that took responsibility of the Easter bombings in Sri Lanka praised him. The terror attack had left 260 people dead.

Two youths from Kerala named as Yahya and Eeza who allegedly joined the Islamic State were inspired by Zakir Naik.

‘He is the same Janeu-dhari Hindu who hops temples just before elections’, BJP slams Rahul Gandhi for refusing to wear Rudraksha mala

A video has been doing the rounds on the microblogging site Twitter in which senior Congress leader Rahul Gandhi is seen refusing to accept what is being alleged to be a Rudraksha garland offered to him by the former Haridwar municipal president Satpal Brahmachari.

In the viral video first shared by the Uttarakhand unit of BJP, Rahul Gandhi is seen showing his hand to Satpal Brahmachari when the latter approached the Congress leader to offer him a garland supposedly made of Rudraksha.

The video is from Rahul Gandhi’s Thursday rally in Uttarakhand’s capital Dehradun. Rahul Gandhi had addressed the ‘Vijay Samman Rally’ organised by the Congress party in Dehradun during his first visit to the state ahead of the assembly elections. The rally was organised almost two weeks after Prime Minister Narendra Modi had addressed a rally in Dehradun, where he had also inaugurated and laid foundation stones for various development projects in the state on December 4.

After the video was posted by BJP Uttarakhand, several BJP leaders reshared it, blasting the Congress scion, who has recently been pontificating on Hinduism, for his hypocrisy.

BJP leader Amit Malviya tweeted the video asserting: “He is the same man who hops temples just before elections, claims to be a janeudhari Hindu and of late pontificates on Hinduism.” 

BJP spokesperson Sambit Patra too lashed out at the Congress leader by Tweeting in Hindi, “जिन्हें है जालीदार टोपी से प्यार, उन्हें ही है रूद्राक्ष की माला से इनकार.. ” (Those who love mesh hats, are the ones who deny Rudraksha garland). He was referring to skullcaps by mesh hats.

Rahul Gandhi’s inadvertent retaliation will undoubtedly derail his recent efforts to establish himself as a sincere Janeu-dhari Hindu.

Interestingly, with the high octane Uttar Pradesh and the Uttarakhand Assembly elections approaching, the Gandhi scion has been increasingly using the Hindu-Hindutvawadi trope to attack the BJP government in the states. However, he has landed up making several goof-ups in the process.

Rahul’s rant on Hindus v/s Hindutvawadi

His recent rant on the differences between Hindus and Hindutvawadi at the ‘Mehangai Hatao’ Rally in Jaipur, Rajasthan, did not go well. Following his sermon, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) leader Indresh Kumar on Thursday lashed out at Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, stating that Gandhi’s knowledge on the subject “is very poor”.

“Without Hindutva, a Hindu cannot remain a living being. By drawing a distinction between the terms Hindu and Hindutva, he has separated the body from its soul. He has very poor knowledge and concept,” Kumar told media persons in the national capital.

“I have no idea” clip of Rahul Gandhi goes viral

Prior to this, Rahul Gandhi’s ‘I have no idea’ clip had gone viral. One amusing instance in the video is from the Gokaranath Ghat where Rahul Gandhi is seen taking part in a puja. As the priest concludes the puja, a reporter from NDTV innocently asks Rahul Gandhi for what purpose did he perform the puja. The Gandhi scion then candidly answers, “I have no idea. They wanted me to come here so I came.”

‘Lord Shiva had swallowed the entire universe’: Janeu-dhari Congress scion misquotes Hindu scriptures

In another instance, the Gandhi scion while addressing his party workers through video conferencing on the occasion of the launch of Congress party’s digital campaign Jan Jagran Abhiyan had distorted a well-known story from Puranas regarding Lord Shiva. Giving an analogy from Hindu mythology, Rahul Gandhi said that Lord Shiva had swallowed the entire universe.

However, Rahul Gandhi massively misquoted Hindu scriptures when he claimed that Shiva had swallowed the universe. Because Lord Shiva had swallowed poison with the potential to destroy the entire universe, he didn’t swallow the entire universe. Shiva drinking poison that emerged during the churning of the ocean is one of the most well-known stories from Hindu texts, and it is ironic that janeu-dhari Rahul Gandhi misquoted such a well-known story.

Income Tax raids conducted against several leaders close to Akhilesh Yadav in tax evasion case

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The Income Tax (IT) department on Saturday (December 18) searched the premises of some of the close aides of the Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav in suspected tax evasion cases.

Searches are being conducted at the premises of secretary and national spokesperson Rajeev Rai, RCL group promotor Manoj Yadav and Jainendra Yadav, a house staff turned OSD of Akhilesh Yadav.

The IT team is searching for the premise of Rajeev Rai at Sahadatpura in Mau district who is considered close to Akhilesh Yadav.

A 12 member team of IT from Varanasi started a search operation at the house of Rai in the early morning.

Besides a politician, Rajeev Rai in his website claims himself as an educationalist, businessman, and philanthropist who is also chairman of AVK Group of Institutions that runs a chain of institutions in Bengaluru. He describes himself as one of the most important men behind the success of forming the 1st Samajwadi Party government with an absolute majority in UP in 2012. Rai owns multiple properties in Lucknow, Mainpuri and Agra. 

Rai claimed neither he has black money nor any criminal background and the IT search was nothing but a political vendetta.

Samajwadi Party members hackled and tried to physically prevent IT, officials, from discharging their duty, and a large number of them assembled outside of the residence of Rai started sloganeering.

Besides Rai, the IT team has knocked on the door of RCL Group promoter Manoj Yadav in Mainpuri who is also said to be close to Akhilesh Yadav. His house in Agra is being searched by sleuths.

Another team is carrying search at the house of Jainendra Yadav alias Neetu Yadav at Vishal Khand area in Lucknow.  Neetu Yadav was Officer on Special Duty (OSD) of Akhilesh Yadav when he was Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh. He was once an electrician at the house of Mulayam Singh Yadav who used to live at the servant quarter. When Akhilesh became CM he appointed Neetu Yadav as his ODS.

Akhilesh Yadav questions the timing of IT action

So far there is no official statement from IT about the reasons and outcome of searches, Akhilesh Yadav questioned the timing.

He said that as the assembly election of Uttar Pradesh would come closer central agencies would be active. He said that the same action could have been taken a month ago but the searches right before the elections raise suspicion.

BJP responds to Akhilesh

Uttar Pradesh BJP spokesperson Rakesh Tripathi said that Akhilesh Yadav should not fear from IT search if he and his party were clean.

“This is called a guilty mind is always suspicious. It department has its own way of functioning and in the past raids were carried against BJP leaders also. Akhilesh should not afraid if he has not done anything wrong,” said Tripathi.

Harvard saga: How NYT turned a scam by suspected Pakistani Tauseef into a ‘Hindutvavadi conspiracy’ to shield Nidhi Razdan

Almost a year after former NDTV journalist Nidhi Razdan had revealed that she was scammed into believing that she has been offered a teaching job at the Harvard University, The New York Times published a report on the issue 2 days ago. In the report titled ‘That Job at Harvard? It’s Not Real’, NYT tried to blame Hindu nationalists for the scam, and revealed that while several women in India were targeted in the elaborated scam, only Nidhi Razdan had fallen for it, who had resigned from NDTV to move to the USA, and had announced the same in public.

Although the article says that the identity of the scamsters is not known, it claims that they had expressed support online for the Hindu nationalist movement in India. It is not revealed where this support for Hindu nationalism was expressed by the people behind the scam. The article also repeatedly uses the term ‘Hindu nationalist’ while referring to the Modi government and BJP, making a clear insinuation on the political leaning of the unknown culprits.

Interestingly, while NYT claims that there could be Pakistan links to the scam and that the scamster spoke in a UAE accent, it blames Hindutvavadis without any proof. Further, it also mentions that a BJP spokesperson was targeted in this scam, Nighat Abbas, and yet, it claims that journalists like Nidhi were targeted because they speak up against the “Hindu nationalist cause”.

New York Times mentioned in their report:

“Nearly a year later, it is still uncertain why Ms. Razdan and the other women were targeted. Although the scammers expressed support online for the Hindu nationalist movement in India, they shed little light on their decision to trick reporters”.

Essentially, the New York Times declared that the scamsters were Hindutvavadis at the very beginning of their “investigation”. Did they provide proof for their assertion? Not really. Essentially, the New York Times took a year to “investigate” the story and had all the evidence to the contrary, but chose to blame Hindutvavadis when it was a spokesperson of Hindutvavadi party BJP who had raised alarm over the scam and the handle mentioned, who had committed the scam, was one who has been abusing Hindutvavadis on Twitter.

The NYT “investigation” and their conduct raises far more questions than it answers. The primary question that it raises is whether NYT purposely conducted an “investigation” that revealed nothing, simply to tangentially blame Hindutvavadis, to shield Nidhi and give her a new lease on public life.

There are certain points to be noted about the NYT investigation before we prove how the publication lied through their teeth.

  1. They mention, right off the bat, that Nidhi wanted to accept this opportunity at Harvard because she was fed up with the toxic media atmosphere in India and that she was being mercilessly trolled by “Hindutvavadis”.
  2. They slyly attribute the scam to Nidhi’s “digital naivety”.
  3. After a 1 year-long investigation that involved 3 journalists, New York Times proclaims that they don’t know who did the scam and the ultimate purpose of the scam – basically, they give no additional information as such except saying that Hindutvavadis did it – without any proof.
  4. They claim that they reviewed Tweet archives of certain handles (two to be specific). However, even after that, they claimed the handle was a Hindutvavadi.
  5. They have on record that the number was from UAE and the scamster had a Pakistani accent, yet they blamed Hindutvavadis
  6. Nighat Abbas had alerted about the scam on Twitter months before Nidhi announced her quitting NDTV, but she did not bother.
  7. In fact, it was Hindutvavadis who had alerted about the scam, but, NYT decided to blame Hindutvavadis for a handle that had abused them in the past.

In the article, they mention several journalists, namely, Rohini Singh, Zainab Sikandar and one anonymous journalist who was sent the same scam offer. Interestingly, all three journalists got the scam offers from someone called Tauseef Ahmad.

The other person who this scam was tried on was BJP spokesperson Nighat Abbas. On 29th November 2019, Nighat Abbas had taken to Twitter to raise alarm over the scam. In fact, she had tagged the handle of Tauseef Ahmad, the person who is the common link in all the journalists targeted as well. She had said in a video shared on Twitter that Tauseef is cheating people in the name of Harvard University.

On the 30th November Congress spokesperson Tehseen Poonawalla had lauded Nighat Abbas for speaking up about the scam. When Tehseen tweeted, it was a Hindutvavadi handle who had tagged Nidhi Razdan and Rohini Singh and asked why they follow Tauseef Ahmad, the man who was perpetuating the scam.

Another individual back in November 2019 had taken a screenshot of Nidhi Razdan and Rohini following Tauseef and asked Nighat to ask them if this individual was a terrorist.

This raises an important question.

Why did NYT not raise this aspect in their article about Nidhi and Rohini Singh following the scamster even after they were alerted? In fact, it was months after a Hindutvavadi herself had tagged Nidhi to alert her about the scam, she left her job on the offer of the same scamster.

One can always say that someone who is followed by so many people might not have checked her mentions and perhaps did not notice that she was tagged. However, it is pertinent to note that Tehseen also responded to the tweet where she was tagged and given that Tehseen is a well-known person with a verified handle, Nidhi would have seen his notification separately in the “verified” tab of notifications (an option that verified handles have).

Therefore, it stands to reason that Nidhi and Rohini actually did see the notification of the conversation where the scam was being discussed and the fact that they were following the person who was scamming them and others.

Interestingly, Rohini clearly did realise that it was a scam and distanced herself, according to NYT. But why did Nidhi not do the same is a mystery that remains, even after NYT took a year to investigate the case.

Who is Tauseef Ahmad and what trace of him remains on Twitter

Tauseef Ahmad is mentioned several times in the article by the New York Times and is the common thread of this scam. From Nighat Abbas to Rohini Singh, Zainab Sikankar and finally, Nidhi, all got the same scam offer from Tauseef, even though it was only Nidhi who fell for this scam.

It is pertinent to note that there is no evidence to support that Tauseef was an Indian.

Here is what NYT says about Tauseef after talking to The Print journalist Zainab Sikandar (emphasis added):

“Flattered and curious, Ms Sikander began chatting with Tauseef on the WhatsApp instant messaging and calling app. She wasn’t thrown off by the fact that his phone number started with the country code of the United Arab Emirates, although he claimed to be in the Boston area. Maybe he was a foreign student with Dubai connections, she thought. She remembers his voice: young, with a South Asian accent, which she believed sounded Pakistani“.

The quote clearly mentions that he had a UAE number and spoke with a Pakistani accent.

NYT goes on to quote a cybersecurity expert who seems to have examined Nidhi Razdan’s computer. They say (emphasis added):

“Mr. Jain believed foreign governments might have played a role. The suspicious file he uncovered on Ms. Razdan’s computer contained an IP address that had once been linked to a hacking group believed to be associated with Pakistani intelligence“.

It is therefore clear, from the NYT’s own report, that there is a strong suspicion that Tauseef was actually from Pakistan.

NYT also claims that they have examined that archived tweets of those involved in the scam – presumably – including that of Tauseef Ahmad. Yet, they have claimed that the scam could have been conducted by “Hindutvavadis”.

Forget archive of the tweets, if NYT had just searched on Twitter itself, even though Tauseef’s account has been suspended, it would amply clear that Tauseef was no Hindutvavadi. In fact, he had abused Hindus and those who NYT likes to brand “Hindutvavadis”.

On 15th of November 2019, Tauseef giving threats to those speaking against Islam had surfaced. A Twitter user had then taken a screenshot and tagged Twitter, urging them to suspend the handle as well.

There are several responses by Hindus that remain on Twitter, even though Tauseef’s handle has been suspended and we could not find an archive of his tweets on the internet.

There are several Hindus who responded to him. One prominent Twitter user and author had responded with the words of Ambedkar, talking about how Muslims can’t accept India as their motherland, pointing to the fact that Tauseef was anything but a Hindutvavadi.

There were others who had followed suit:

While we now don’t know what tweet was being responded to, but on the 15th of November itself, one Twitter user had responded to Tauseef mentioning that his “Indian Muslim friend” had also called for a second partition of India. We can only extrapolate this response to assume that perhaps Tauseef was speaking as a Pakistani about Indian Muslims and therefore, this response, specifically mentioning “Indian Muslim” was given to him in 2019.

Let us pause for a moment and notice the timeline.

It was on 29th of November 2019 that Nighat Abbas had tagged Tauseef Ahmad on Twitter and alerted about the scam.

Then, on the 30th November 2019 that a “Hindutvavadi” had tagged Nidhi Razdan and Rohini Singh wondering why they were following the scamster on Twitter.

Before all of this, on the 15th of November 2019, Twitter had already erupted countering certain problematic statements by Tauseef where he had also threatened a Hindu woman. By this time, Nidhi was already following this account. We can assume this since NYT article specifically says that Nidhi got the first email on the 14th of November 2019. Now, assuming that Nidhi was already following Tauseef on Twitter, the following questions arise:

  1. Did she notice Tauseef threatening a Hindu woman?
  2. If yes, why was she ok with it? Why did she still continue to indulge with him trusting the fact that the Harvard job offer from him was genuine?
  3. Even if she missed all of this (highly unlikely, but let’s play along, just as Nidhi did), did she not notice Tehseen’s response on the 30th of November 2019 where Nighat had clearly tagged the individual and alerted about the scam? Where another handle had tagged Nidhi asking why she was following the individual involved in the scam?
  4. If she did, why did she continue to indulge for months on end?

After all of these red flags, it was months later, on the 13th of June 2020, that she announced that she was quitting her job for the mythical job offer from Harvard.

We are being asked by the New York Times, and Nidhi (who has declared this case closed) to believe that Nidhi missed all the red flags one after the other, months on end, to eventually quit her job for a scam offer, because she is digitally “naive”.

So where did the Hindutvavadi theory come from, as peddled by the NYT?

Here are the places where NYT randomly theorises that the scam was perpetrated by Hindu Nationalists.

First mention:

“Nearly a year later, it is still uncertain why Ms. Razdan and the other women were targeted. Although the scammers expressed support online for the Hindu nationalist movement in India, they shed little light on their decision to trick reporters”.

This is right at the beginning of the report before Tauseef is even mentioned.

The next mention, where the “Hindu Nationalist” theory gathers steam is based on the say-so of a journalist who spoke “on the condition of anonymity”.

The next target was another female journalist working at a prominent Indian publication, who spoke with The Times on the condition that she was not identified. Suspicious about the scammer’s U.A.E. phone number, she quickly broke off contact too. But the scammers didn’t give up. By the time they communicated in November 2019 with Nighat Abbass, a spokeswoman for India’s ruling political party, known by its acronym, the B.J.P., they had copied email signatures from real Harvard employees and swiped official letterhead from the university’s website.

Around the same time, they opened a new Twitter account under the name Seema Singh, who identified herself as a “coder” and claimed she was based in Bharat, another name for India that is preferred by nationalists who see “India” as a colonial term. She sent sexually aggressive messages, tagging Ms. Sikander and some of the other women targeted in the scam. “You look so hot,” she said in one tweet. “Can I join you in your shower?” said another.

Seema Singh later updated her profile, claiming to be a bisexual Deutsche Bank employee living in Frankfurt. (A Deutsche Bank spokesman said the bank had no employees by that name.) She seemed intimately familiar with Indian politics, constantly commenting on the often raw divide between India’s majority Hindus and minority Muslims and calling out personal connections that the women targeted in the scam had with Kashmir.

Ms. Abbass didn’t notice the raunchy tweets from Seema’s account. Excited about making her first trip to America, she focused on exchanging emails and messages with Tauseef.

They attach a WhatsApp chat but we don’t know if that chat was with Nighat or with the anonymous journalist quoted. Beyond that, we have no evidence about this handle being authentic, something that even NYT agrees. And since it was Tauseef who was the common link in all these scams, it is interesting that NYT would ignore that and blame “Hindutvavadis” based on a fake account they could not track and came up only later.

Another excerpt from the NYT article randomly blames Hindus.

Another theory emerged: Perhaps the women were targeted by an individual, someone ideologically aligned with the Hindu nationalist ruling party in India and willing to go to great lengths to humiliate critics of the government’s intervention in Kashmir and those who spoke out against the divide between Hindus and Muslims. On Twitter, the scammers’ Seema account, which was like an alter ego to the more mild Tauseef account, frequently ranted about these issues“.

They firstly claim that it is a “THEORY” that it “COULD HAVE BEEN” Hindu nationalist because the targets were critics of the government. Even though they mention Nighat Abbas, who is a spokesperson of BJP, the ruling party, was also targeted. So if she was also targeted, how would this theory of “critics” being targeted hold? NYT does not explain but relies on pure conjectures.

The other point they mention is the fake account of “Seema” talking about Hindus and Muslims. They mention that Seema was a “mild” version of Tauseef – the probable Pakistani handle. In this para, though, they almost make it sound like Tauseef himself was a “Hindu nationalist”, a conjecture that has been summarily disproven.

In fact, throughout the article, they mention “Hindu Nationalist” as a pejorative while talking about the “critics of the government” insinuating that it was the Hindu Nationalists who targeted these individuals.

This entire “investigation” by the New York Times is an attempt to not only rehabilitate Nidhi Razdan and paint her as a victim, but also blame Hindutvavadis for something they did not do. In fact, they even fail to mention that a “Hindutvavadi” account had tagged Nidhi Razdan specifically to alert her about the scam in November 2019. This entire investigation, which eventually declares that they have no idea who did the scam and why, and then goes on to blame Hindutvavadi, is an elaborate attempt to blame the Modi government, the supporters of the government, Hindus in general and Hindutvavadis without any proof. Interestingly, even Nidhi Razdan blamed everyone, except herself, to declare that the case was closed after the NYT article. She did not care who did it, or why it happened, she was just happy that the NYT painted her a victim and ended up blaming Hindutvavadis.

Was that the aim all along? One would never know.

Daughter of Brigadier Lidder informs that she deactivated her account on her own accord, shuts down conspiracy theories of Liberal media

On Friday (December 18), the daughter of Brigadier Lidder took to Twitter to inform that she had deactivated her account on her own accord to spend time with her family. The clarification came at the backdrop of conspiracy theories and lies spread by the liberal jamaat that linked the deactivation of her Twitter account to supposed trolling and harassment by right-wing groups.

In a tweet, Aashna Lidder said, “Gratitude surges through me as I thank the nation for mourning the loss of my father with us… The biggest consolation I have is it, isn’t my loss alone, it’s our loss. Had de-activated my Twitter on my own, to spend time with family and away from any distraction.”

Screengrab of the tweet by Aashna Lidder

Her tweet came as a major blow to left-liberal journalists and media portals that earlier claimed that she was subjected to rape threats, intimidatory tacts for being woke. On December 11, The Print peddled similar lies in an article titled, ‘Woke, opinionated, next Gurmehar Kaur’ — Twitter bullies force Aashna Lidder to close account.’

Screengrab of the news report by The Print

Opindia had debunked the fake narrative surrounding Aashna Lidder’s targetting

Opindia had earlier reported how an NDTV journalist by the name of Arvind Gunasekar was at the helm of peddling the fake news. He had shared a screenshot of her deactivated account said and said that it was the consequence of targeted harassment by right-wing/hate groups. He then asked her to stay strong and return soon.

Retired IAS officer Surya Pratap Singh went as far as to say that “andhbhakts” had given her rape threats, due to which she deactivated her account. This claim originated from an account called “Sandeep Choudhury” who, after claiming that Aashna Lidder got rape threats, did a u-turn and claimed that she did not get rape threats. It was the account that started the rumour of Lidder getting threats and being attacked by the right-wing.

The narrative that was spun by the liberals was that Aashna Lidder deactivated her account because she was attacked and threatened by “right-wing goons”. However, there is very little evidence to prove that there was any threat or attack against her.