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India: Bombay High Court grants bail to Muslim who swore oath of allegiance to ISIS: ‘not incriminating’

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Well, sure. It isn’t as if Mohammad Raisuddin joined a group dedicated to opposing jihad violence and Sharia oppression of women. That would have been incriminating.

“Oath accepting ISIS Chief as Caliph of Muslims not incriminating: Bombay High Court grants bail to UAPA accused,” by Satyendra Wankhade, Bar and Bench, June 28, 2022 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):

The Bombay High Court on Monday granted bail to Mohammad Raisuddin, a man arrested under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) in 2016 for allegedly being linked to the Islamic State (ISIS). [Mohammad Raisuddin v. NIA & Ors]

According to Justices Revati Mohite Dere and VG Bisht, an oath allegedly signed by the applicant, which the prosecution said showed allegiance to a terrorist organisation, did not seem to be incriminating.

“Even a perusal of the Oath (Baith) allegedly written by the appellant, at the highest, appears to be a declaration of the acceptance of one Abi Bakar Al Baghdadi Al Hussaini Al Quraishi as the `Caliph’ of the Muslims. Prima-facie, a perusal of the said Oath (Baith) does not appear to be incriminating,” they held.

The appellant before the High Court sought quashing of a 2019 National Investigation Agency (NIA) Special Court order that rejected his bail application.

The prosecution relied on conversations that the appellant had with four others over threats to Islam, actions of the ISIS and other issues like beef ban, communal riots, injustice to Muslims in Palestine, etc. As per the witnesses’ accounts, the appellant would inspire them to work for Islam, referring to these incidents.

Special Public Prosecutor Aruna Kamath Pai opposed the appeal and asserted that no interference was required with the special court order, as there were prima facie serious allegations levelled against the appellant. She argued that delay in commencement of the trial was not a ground for enlarging the appellant on bail.

According to the appellant, there was no legitimate evidence to connect him with the alleged offence. His counsel denied that his client either wrote or signed the oath (Baith) pledging allegiance to the ISIS chief, on the basis of which he was arrested.

Since he had been in custody since 2016 and not one witness out of the 550 witnesses in the case had been examined, he claimed that the trial would likely take a long time to commence and thus prayed for grant of bail.

The Court noted that the prosecution, in its charge-sheet, had not produced allegedly incriminating WhatsApp chats that connected the accused with the offences….

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