The Head Of Pakistan’s Security Agency Commented On Turning Over Dawood Ibrahim And Hafiz Saeed

When questioned on October 18 about whether underworld boss Dawood Ibrahim and the perpetrator of the 26/11 Mumbai assault, Hafiz Saeed, will be turned up to India anytime soon, a high-ranking Pakistani intelligence officer declined to respond.
The director-general of Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA), Mohsin Butt, declined to respond to inquiries about the matter from the news organization ANI when he was in India for the Interpol General Assembly in Delhi. Butt is one of the two Pakistani delegation members.
Dawood Ibrahim’s participation in the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts led to his designation as a global terrorist by India and the United States in 2003. The National Investigation Agency made a financial reward offer of 25 lakh rupees last month for information that resulted in his capture.
The prize is tied to an investigation into Ibrahim’s gang, D Company, which set up a shop in India to smuggle weapons, explosives, drugs, and counterfeit money as well as carry out terrorist activities in collaboration with Pakistani authorities and terror groups.
Because of his involvement in the 2008 Mumbai attack, Hafiz Saeed was put on the NIA’s most-wanted list. A Pakistani court convicted the leader of Lashkar-e-Taiba to four prison terms totaling six months to five years April for offenses including the financing of terrorism. All must function simultaneously.
Pakistan’s team went to the Interpol summit, which was held in India for the first time in 25 years, despite the hostility between Islamabad and New Delhi.
The highest governing body of Interpol is the General Assembly. Annual meetings are held with 195 member nations’ representatives. Each nation is allowed to send one or more delegates, who can be ministers, police heads, the head of their own Interpol bureaus, or top ministry officials.
News Mania Desk