Headlines
Two arrested in Bengal nun gang-rape case
Kolkata, March 26
In its first major
breakthrough, West Bengal Police on Thursday arrested two people in
connection with the March 14 gang-rape of a nun inside a convent in
Ranaghat, an officer said.
A Criminal Investigation Department
(CID) team of the state police nabbed a Bangladeshi man, Mohammed Salim
Sheikh, from a Mumbai slum in the early hours with the help of the
Mumbai crime branch.
CID Deputy Inspector General (operations)
Dilip Kumar Adak told reporters here that another person Gopal Sarkar
has been arrested from Habra in North 24 Parganas district for
harbouring the gang of bandits, who committed the crime inside the
convent.
The 71-year-old sister superior of the Convent of Jesus
and Mary was brutalised by the dacoits in Nadia disrtict's Ranaghat,
some 80 km from Kolkata.
In the aftermath of the incident, police
had circulated through the media images of the suspects captured on the
CCTV cameras installed in the convent. But Adak said Sheikh was not
among the suspects whose image was captured on CCTV.
"We can know
more details about his role after interrogation. He has admitted he was
involved in the crime. I can't give you more information now," he said.
Following
a tip-off, a team of CID officers, led by Deputy Superintendent of
Police Pinaki Ranjan Das, had gone to Mumbai on Wednesday.
They
conducted a joint raid with the Mumbai Crime branch and caught Sheikh
from a house in Pilkhana Street of Mahila Mahal Jhoparpatty (slum) in
south Mumbai.
He has been brought to the state and was presented in the Ranaghat Court on Thursday.
He
said acting on another piece of information, a CID team led by DSP Anik
Sarkar picked up Sarkar from Habra and arrested him after sustained
grilling. He would be produced in court on Friday.
Sarkar, who
had allegedly sheltered the miscreants before they committed the crime,
came to India illegally from Bangladesh in 2002 and has been staying in
Habra since then.
"He has been staying illegally there since 2002. Sarkar gave shelter to the miscreants prior to the incident," said Adak.
Asked
whether he was also present at the scene of the crime, the CID officer
said: "So far we have got information that he only gave shelter to the
miscreants."
To repeated queries about the total number of
criminals who raided the convent on March 14 and whether police have got
leads about the criminals still at large, Adak said: "We can get
details about the other miscreants only after intense grilling of the
accused."
The miscreants had vandalised the convent between 2
a.m. and 5 a.m. on March 14. "They looted the convent and also raped the
nun."
Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee had ordered a CID inquiry soon after the incident.
But
the sleuths' inability to make much headway and the consequent public
backlash had forced Banerjee on March 18 to announce through a Facebook
post that the case was being handed over to the Central Bureau of
Investigation.
However, the central agency is yet to formally take over.
After
her discharge from the Ranaghat sub-divisional hospital on Friday last
week, the rape survivor subsequently left the state for an undisclosed
location prompting the opposition parties to call it an "embarrassment"
for Banerjee and her ruling Trinamool Congress.
Besides the NCW,
the Prime Minister's Office as well as the National Human Rights
Commission have also taken cognisance of the matter and sought a
detailed report from the Banerjee government.