Maharashtra minister Nawab Malik on Sunday alleged that NCB's Mumbai zonal director Sameer Wankhede was part of a plot to "kidnap" actor Shah Rukh Khan's son Aryan Khan for ransom. Speaking to reporters here, Malik claimed BJP leader Mohit Bharatiya was the "mastermind" of the plot.
Aryan Khan was last month arrested following a raid led by Wankhede on a cruise ship from which drugs were allegedly seized. He was later granted bail by the Bombay High Court. Malik has repeatedly termed the cruise drugs raid as "fake" and levelled a series allegations against Wankhede. The minister on Sunday claimed Wankhede had met Bharatiya at a 'kabarastan' (graveyard) in suburban Oshiwara.
"But, because of his (Wankhede's) good luck, we couldn't get the footage since police's CCTV was not functioning. Hence, out of fear, Wankhede had lodged a false complaint that he was being stalked," Malik said. "The alleged cruise rave party was a plot to kidnap Aryan Khan for ransom, of which Mohit Bharatiya was the mastermind," the NCP leader alleged.
Accusing Wankhede of being involved in the plot, he claimed Bharatiya was a member of Wankhede's "private army". Malik appealed to Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan to come forward and support his fight against injustice.
He accused Wankhede of creating fear among drug consumers while protecting peddlers and traffickers. He claimed the trap to kidnap Aryan Khan was laid through Rishabh Sachdeva, the brother-in-law of Bharatiya.
"Rs 25 crore were sought, and the deal was finalised at Rs 18 crore...Rs 50 lakh were given. The deal got spoilt because the selfie of K P Gosavi (NCB's witness in the cruise drugs case) with Aryan, after his arrest, became viral," he claimed.
The minister further said there have been attempts to frighten Shah Rukh Khan that since he "gave an amount of Rs 50 lakh", he too becomes an accused. "I appeal to him not to get scared. If your child is kidnapped and ransom is sought and the parent pays it, he is the victim and not the accused," Malik said.
Aryan Khan was taken to the cruise party by Pratik Gabba and Aamir Furniturewala, he claimed, adding that Sachdeva, Gabba and Furniturewala were let off by the NCB.
"Kashif Khan, an organiser of the cruise party, had tried hard to invite state minister Aslam Shaikh and children of our top ministers to come to the party," he claimed.
"Besides cases of Aryan Khan and Sameer Khan (Malik's son-in-law), all 26 cases (being probed by the NCB) should be given to the SIT for probe. If there is an attempt to scare me by putting my son-in-law's case for re-examination, let me be clear that I am not scared," the minister said.
Malik's son-in-law was arrested in January this year by the NCB in an alleged drugs case, and was granted bail in September.
The minister further said the real name of Sam D'Souza, whose whose name had cropped up in connection with the pay-off allegations in the cruise drugs case, was Samville, and he was called for interrogation by NCB official V V Singh in June this year.
"Why hasn't he been arrested yet?" Malik asked, without revealing the case details.
The NCB served him a notice in June. Singh also warned him against changing his phone handset, Malik said, referring to a telephonic conversation which he shared on his Twitter handle on Sunday.
Bharatiya a former general secretary of Mumbai BJP, on Saturday alleged that one Sunil Patil from Dhule, "who is closely associated with NCP leaders including former Maharashtra home minister Anil Deshmukh", is the mastermind of the cruise drug bust episode. However, Malik on Sunday claimed Sunil Patil did not belong to the NCP and he had never met him.
He also said the NCB had challenged the Gujarat government's forensic lab report which gave a clean chit to his son-in-law before an NDPS court in the alleged drugs case. Malik appealed to the NCB and the BJP not to "shield" tainted persons.
"My fight is not against the NCB or the BJP. It is against those indulging in wrongdoings. Please support me. I am also supporting eradication of the drugs menace," he said.
Malik also demanded that action be taken against NCB's "quartet" - Wankhede, V V Singh, Ashish Ranjan and Wankhede's driver Mane - claiming they were involved in "wrongdoings" in the NCB's zonal office.