Why Jabir Ali killed Jabir Ali
NEW DELHI: Fifty-year-old Jabir Ali alias Haji, who was killed at home in GuruTeghBahadur Enclave in northeast Delhi in June, had hoped his namesake back home would watch over his village plot. Little did he know that the man coveted his land and wife and, in a bid to gain both, would end up murdering him.
A team led by inspector Attar Singh and ACP Ved Prakash has solved the murder of Ali, a resident of Janata Flats in GTB Enclave, which took place on the intervening night of June 15 and June 16. Three contract killers have been arrested. They were identified as Jane Alam alias Tinku (27), Amir Hussain (22) and Hanif (26), all residents of Ramjanpur village in Badaun district of Uttar Pradesh.
"The victim's wife, Rukhsana alias Guddi, had a dubious past. She had eloped with a man from Punjab about five years ago but was brought home by her husband," DCP (Special Cell) Sanjeev Yadav said.
Special commissioner S N Srivastava said Ali left Rukhsana at his village when he brought her home five years ago. He owned 150 bighas land in Ramjanpur and he had let it out to a man, also named Jabir Ali, for farming.
"When the victim left his wife there, she had an affair with the tenant. When the victim came to know about it, he brought her back to Delhi," Srivastava said.
Rukhsana conspired with her lover to eliminate her husband and transfer the ownership of the land to him. The duo offered Rs 4 lakh to Aale, a resident of the village, to kill Ali. Aale took Hanif's help and plotted the murder. They came to Delhi on June 12 and stayed in a rented house. They hired four menâ€"Qamar, Amir, Shanu and Jane Alam. "All of them reached Ali's house around 10pm on June 15. Ruksana hid them on the first floor. The victim came home around 12.30pm. Ruksana gave him food laced with sedatives and also drugged other family members. When Ali got drowsy after half-an-hour, the accused murdered him and left," Srivastava said. The victim was found stabbed to death by his son Sajid Khan around 2.15am, said police. A bloodstained knife was lying beside the body, they added.
"It was evident that it was an inside job. There had been no forced entry and no signs of struggle. All valuables were intact," said Yadav.
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-08-09/delhi/41236693_1_june-15-victim-hanif
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