Indian gangster Ravi Pujari.
Fugitive Indian gangster Ravi Pujari, known as “the Hindu Don”, is believed to be running a murderous extortion racket from a secret hideout in Australia.In a series of threatening phone calls to several high profile legal, Bollywood and business identities, the 46-year-old Mumbai-born Pujari has stated that he is living in Australia.
The latest figure to
receive a phone call from Pujari was Mumbai entrepreneur and textile magnate
Nusli Wadia, whose son Ness Wadia recently went through a public and acrimonious
break-up with his girlfriend, Bollywood actress Preity Zinta.
According to a police
complaint lodged by Nusli Wadia, his personal secretary received a phone call
on Wednesday from a man claiming to be Pujari.
When told that Nusli
was out of the country, the caller left a message saying that “we are all from
underworld. Preity Zinta should not be harassed or else ... ''
According to Mumbai
police officer Vinayak Deshmukh, the man said he was calling from Australia.
An hour later Mr
Nusli’s secretary received an SMS that said: “Give message to Wadia, don't f---
around with Preity Zinta or else I will f--- whole of your business. Don Ravi
Pujari.”
Wanted on charges
including murder, conspiracy to commit murder, and illegal possession of
firearms, Pujari rose through the ranks of Mumbai’s notorious underworld in the
1990s by targeting the construction and hospitality industries.
Fluent in English,
Hindi and and other local languages, Pujari is believed to have cemented his
reputation by assassinating a rival gangster named Bala Zalte, and by ordering
the killing of a construction executive Om Prakash Kukreja.
Pujari, who is
believed to be carrying a forged Australian passport, has managed to evade
Indian police since the late 1990s when he fled to Dubai.
Mumbai police
spokesman Manesh Patil said Indian police were treating seriously the
possibility that Pujari was living in Australia.
“The inquiry is
ongoing, and I cannot give away too many details of the investigation, but we
are treating this possibility very seriously,” Dr Patil said. “This man
is a very dangerous gangster, he is one of the most wanted men in India, he is
believed to responsible for many crimes including extortion and murder.”
High profile
Delhi-based lawyer M.S. Khan, who has represented some of India’s most
infamous terrorists including the so-called “Indian Osama Bin Laden” Yasin
Bhatkal, said on January 16, he received a call on his mobile phone from
someone who identified himself as the “underworld Don Ravi Pujari” and who said
“he was calling from Australia”.
After reminding Mr
Khan of two lawyers who had recently been gunned down in Bangalore and Mumbai,
the caller warned Mr Khan that unless he stopped defending Bhatkil, his own
life would be in danger.
Later that evening,
Mr Khan received an SMS that said: “I am going to kill one of ur family
members. Don Ravi Pujari”.
Another SMS signed
“underworld don ravi pujari” stated that he didn’t want Mr Khan to take part
“in any more terrorist activities” and demanded that he tell the media he was
dropping Bhatkil’s case because he "loved his family”.
Mr Khan, who has
three children, refused, mocking Pujari with an SMS of his own that said: “Mr
Pujari, My children deserve to know ... Why would you kill them. You can call
me after 7pm on any day and can speak to them.”
Several months later,
Mr Khan said he arrived home late one night after a party and was greeted by
armed men waiting on his doorstep who repeated the warning that he should drop
the Bhatkil case.
“Am I afraid of him?”
said Mr Khan, with a roar of infectious laughter. “No, because if I let myself
be intimidated by this man then I become a prostitute.”
Mr Khan did vow,
however, that if the Indian government ever authorised it, he would like to “go
down to Australia and shoot this bloody bastard”.
Veteran Mumbai crime
reporter S. Balakrishnan, who has also received several phone calls from
Pujari, said Pujari’s claim to be in Australia had to be taken seriously.
“It’s quite possible.
We know that gangsters like him have made investments in Australia and launched
various kinds of scams from Australia, so you have to think it’s possible that
he really is where he says he is.”
Balakrishnan said
that Pujari had made a serious mistake in threatening the textile magnate Nusli
Wadia who had deep connections with the party of new Prime Minister Narendra
Modi.
“He’s bitten off more than he can chew this
time,” Balakrishnan said. “The police are really going to come after him now.”Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/indian-don-ravi-pujari-may-be-running-racket-from-australia-police-say-20140620-zsgbe.html#ixzz35DetBngS
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