Intelligence reports have claimed that Zabiuddin Ansari alias Abu Jindal was the Indian link in the country's worst-ever terror attack -- the 26/11 carnage. They have pinpointed Ansari as one of the men who guided and instructed the terrorists while they went on a rampage slaughtering innocent victims in Mumbai.
Rediff.com's Prasanna D Zore travelled to Beed to track the beginning of the terror trail, to find out how Ansari, a quiet wireman, tranformed into Abu Jindal, one of the most wanted terrorists in India right now.
Read Part 2: Why no one in Beed knows Zabiuddin
Read Part 3: Where are the missing students of Beed?
Who's the real Abu Jindal aka Zabiuddin Ansari?
This is one of the most disturbing questions that the residents of Beed and Gevrai towns, in the dusty cotton bowl of Beed district in Maharashtra, are trying to come to terms with ever since news broke out that intelligence agencies have identified one of the handlers from Pakistan, who spoke to the 26/11 terrorists at the Chabad House, as Syed Zabiuddin Syed Zakiuddin aka Abu Jindal.
Zabiuddin reportedly hails from Beed, and has been missing since 2005.
Ajmal Kasab, the lone terrorist arrested during the terror siege in Mumbai, had last July stunned the special court trying him at Mumbai's Arthur Road jail, when he revealed that a person named Abu Jindal had tutored all the 10 terrorists on how to speak Hindi. The intelligence agencies have surmised, for want of voice samples of Syed Zakiuddin, that Abu Jindal could be Syed Zabiuddin.
The transfer certificate as well as a copy of Zabiuddin's hall ticket documents available at the Milliya Arts, Science & Management Science College and Bal Bhim College in Beed clearly proves that the name of India's most wanted fugitive is Syed Zabiuddin Syed Zakiuddin (unless Syed Zabiuddin and Syed Zabiuddin Ansari are two different people) as against Syed Zabiuddin Ansari, as has been widely reported in the media.
Rediff.com accessed the registration record of Zabiuddin at Bal Bhim College, where he studied till Class XII (transfer certificate number 332) and his BSc final year (2004) hall ticket.
The hall ticket, numbered ACO34137 and issued by the Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University, bears his name as Syed Zabiuddin Syed Zakiuddin.
The transfer certificate is a document that students have to submit to an educational institution when they pass out of Class XII and seek admission for graduation courses.
The faculty of both the colleges, and some of the neighbours of Zabiuddin's family, confirmed to rediff.com that his name was indeed Syed Zabiuddin.
Syed Zabiuddin's home in Gevrai's Swami Narayan Temple lane where he spent his childhood
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