It is first time in the country that a state government has openly admitted wrong doing by the police in implicating the Muslim youths in terror cases.
Welcoming the government's decision to pay compensation, Syed Rayess Ahmad one of the victims said that it will give some solace to him. "But this is no compensation for all the physical and mental torture me and many others have undergone. We will be happy only when the guilty officials were punished".
The 16 youths who will get the cheques of Rs 3 lakh each include Dr Syed Ibraheem Junaid, Mohamemd Abdul Sattar, Mohammed Abdul Kareen, Arshad Khan, Mohammed Naseeruddin, Mohammed Abdul Raheem, Syed Abdul Quader, Shaikh Mohammed Fareed, Abdul Wajed, Abdul Wasey, Mohammed Rayeesuddin , Mohammed Mustafa Ali, Mohammed Fasihuddin, Mohammed Shajeeuddin, Mohammed Suhail and Syed Abdul Kareem.
Soon after the blast in Mecca Masjid during Friday congregation in Hyderabad on May 18, 2007, the police had started linking the incident to Pakistan and Bangladesh-based terror groups like the Lashkar-e-Tayiba, Hizbul Mujahideen and Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami. They started picking up local youths and accused them of helping the perpetrators. Nine peopled had died in the blast and another six were killed in the police firing outside mosque.
The police had also held Shahed Bilal, a fugitive from Hyderabad, for the incident. Later the Union Home Minister P Chidambram had said that all the leads in the case had gone cold as the main suspect Shahed was killed in Karachi, Pakistan in a shootout.
Only after the Central Bureau of Investigation started investigating the case the involvement of Hindu militants in the blasts in Mecca Masjid and Ajmer Dargah came to light. Presently, the National Investigations Agency is probing the blasts. Several Hindu extremists linked to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh have been arrested in the case. They include Devender Gupta, Lokesh Sharma, Swamy Aseemanad and Bharat Lal.