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Delhi Police Arrest Five More in ISI-Linked Terror Module Bust
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Times of India17.06.2026Crime3 dk okumaIndia

Delhi Police Arrest Five More in ISI-Linked Terror Module Bust

En resumen

  • Delhi Police Special Cell arrested five more members of an eight-person terror module allegedly linked to Pakistan's ISI handler Shahzad Bhatti.
  • The group, Tehreek-e-Taliban Hindustan (TTH), is accused of targeting police, promoting the outfit, and glorifying handlers.
  • They claimed responsibility for an ASI's killing in Punjab.

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Por qué importa

The Delhi Police Special Cell has arrested five more members of a terror module allegedly linked to Pakistan-based ISI handler Shahzad Bhatti. The group, Tehreek-e-Taliban Hindustan (TTH), is accused of targeting police and promoting the outfit.

Tamaño de fuente

The Delhi Police Special Cell has arrested five more members of an eight-person terror module allegedly linked to Pakistan-based Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) handler Shahzad Bhatti, in a major crackdown against a trans-border terror network, the police said on Wednesday. The latest arrests come after a multi-state investigation into the activities of an outfit identified as Tehreek-e-Taliban Hindustan (TTH), which police said had recently expanded its operations in parts of North India. According to Delhi Police, the accused were allegedly tasked with targeting police personnel in Delhi and neighbouring states, promoting the Pakistan-backed outfit through graffiti in the Delhi-NCR region, and putting up posters glorifying Pakistan-based handlers.

TTH linked to attack on police official in Punjab

Police said the group had recently claimed responsibility for the killing of an assistant sub-inspector (ASI) in Majitha, Amritsar. Arms, ammunition and other incriminating material have also been recovered from the arrested accused, according to news agency ANI. The arrests are part of an ongoing probe into alleged attempts to build a terror network with support from handlers based across the border. Delhi Police had earlier busted an international terror-crime syndicate allegedly connected to gangster-turned-terrorist Shahzad Bhatti and his associate Ajmal Gujjar. According to the earlier investigation, seven key operatives were arrested for their alleged involvement in smuggling illegal arms, ammunition and narcotics from Pakistan through Punjab and supplying them across Delhi-NCR.

Operatives allegedly recruited through social media

Intelligence inputs received in May suggested that Pakistan-based handlers were allegedly planning attacks in Delhi-NCR by recruiting young people through social media platforms. Police had arrested one of the accused, Mohit, from northeast Delhi and recovered an illegal pistol, cartridges and a mobile phone containing alleged communications with the network. Investigators said the accused were allegedly recruited through social media and encrypted communication platforms and were tasked with facilitating the movement of weapons and narcotics sent from Pakistan through drone deliveries. Police had also claimed that some members of the network conducted reconnaissance of public places and potential targets, with photographs and videos allegedly shared with handlers based in Pakistan.

NIA conducts searches in Punjab, Haryana

The arrests come days after the National Investigation Agency (NIA) conducted searches at 18 locations in Punjab and Haryana in connection with three terror-gangster network cases linked to Pakistan-based terrorist Shahzad Bhatti. The NIA teams searched locations across nine districts of the two states and examined several individuals as part of the investigation, the agency said. During the searches, the anti-terror agency seized digital devices, documents and information related to communication networks and financial transactions linked to persons under investigation. The NIA said the recovered material has been sent for scrutiny, forensic examination and technical analysis to uncover the larger cross-border conspiracy. The agency has also issued notices to certain individuals asking them to join the investigation for further examination as part of its probe into the alleged network operated by Bhatti from across the border.

Preguntas abiertas

  • What is the full extent of TTH's network?
  • How many more operatives are active?
  • What specific attacks were planned?

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This article was originally published by Times of India.

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