Nepal handed over an accused in the murder of Bangladeshi MP Anar to India, he was absconding for a long time
India-Nepal: Four members of the Detective Branch (DB) of Bangladesh's Dhaka Metropolitan Police had gone to Kathmandu to take Hussain. The team met a senior Nepal Police official and requested him to deport Hussain but Nepal ignored their request.
The case of the murder of a Bangladeshi MP in Kolkata is in the news these days. Nepal has extradited an accused related to the murder to India today. The accused is a citizen of Bangladesh. According to Nepali media, Nepal's Interpol branch handed over Mohammad Siam Hussain to Indian authorities on Monday morning after being contacted by Nepal Police. Let us tell you, after the murder, Hussain fled to Nepal and was arrested from the border area of Nepal.
According to Nepali media, Bangladesh Police wanted Hussain to be handed over to them but Nepal handed him over to Indian authorities. Four members of the Detective Branch (DB) of Bangladesh's Dhaka Metropolitan Police had gone to Kathmandu to take Hussain. The team met a senior Nepal Police official and requested him to deport Hussain but Nepal ignored their request as Nepal and Bangladesh do not have any extradition treaty with Dhaka.
The Bangladeshi MP had come to Kolkata for treatment. A senior official of the Deputy High Commission said that MP Azim had arrived in Kolkata on May 12 and was staying at his friend's house in Baranagar in the northern part of the city. On May 13, he went to meet someone but did not return. The matter came to light on May 18, when Gopal Biswas, an acquaintance of the Bangladeshi MP, reported his disappearance at the police station. Anar was staying at Biswas's house in Kolkata. Biswas claimed that the MP had not been in touch with him since May 17. So he lodged a missing complaint a day later. Messages were sent from his phone to family members that he had left for New Delhi. There is no trace of him.
The West Bengal CID suspects a honey trap was behind the murder. Police believe the MP was lured to a flat in New Town by a woman, and then murdered by hired goons. At the same time, the person detained had met one of the main suspects in the murder. This person lives in an area of West Bengal near Bangladesh's international border. Without revealing the identity of the detainee, the police officer stated that the investigation was looking into why the person met with the MP and what they discussed.
The investigation indicated that the Bangladeshi MP fell into a 'honey trap' laid by a woman, who was also close to the MP's friend. It seems that the woman had lured the MP to go to the flat in New Town. We suspect that he was murdered as soon as he reached there.