The cyber cell of Mumbai police which is probing the 'Bulli Bai' app case has arrested a 19-year-old woman, alleged to be the main culprit, from Uttarakhand, and a 21-year-old engineering student from Bengaluru, officials said on Tuesday.
Vishal Kumar Jha, the student, and co-accused Shweta Singh who is from Uttarakhand allegedly knew each other. According to police, more arrests are likely.
While a court in Mumbai remanded Jha in police custody till January 10, a court in Uttarakhand granted Mumbai police four-day transit remand of Shweta Singh so that she could be brought to the city.
She will be produced before the Mumbai court on Wednesday, said a senior police official.
The Mumbai police had registered a first information report (FIR) against unidentified persons following complaints that doctored photographs of hundreds of Muslim women were uploaded for ‘auction' on an app called 'Bulli Bai', hosted on the open-source software platform GitHub.
While there was no actual 'auction' or 'sale', the purpose of the app seemed to be to humiliate and intimidate the targeted women, many of whom are active social media users.
A team of the Mumbai cyber police arrested Shweta Singh in Uttarakhand, an official said in Mumbai, adding that she was operating multiple accounts related to the app.
Engineering student Jha was detained in Bengaluru in connection with the case on Monday and later brought to Mumbai.
The Mumbai cyber police station has also registered a case against the app's unidentified developers and Twitter handles which promoted it.
Jha, said the senior police official, was operating a Twitter handle by the name 'Khalsa Supremacist', and had changed the names of some other fake handles to resemble Sikh names.
Police will also probe whether there was any attempt to create religious tension in Punjab where elections are due this year, he said.
Some other Twitter handles which promoted the app also had photographs or caricatures of Turbaned persons in their profile pictures and the posts in question contained text in the Punjabi script, in an apparent attempt to mislead about the identity, an official had said earlier.
Mumbai police produced Vishal Kumar Jha before the Bandra metropolitan magistrate's court here on Tuesday, and sought his custody for 10 days.
The court remanded him in police's custody till January 10.
It also granted the police permission to carry out searches at his house in Bengaluru.
While seeking his custody, the police told the court that after the suspect detained in Uttarakhand (Shweta Singh, later arrested) was brought here and her custody was obtained, the two accused would be questioned together.
"My client Vishal Jha has been falsely implicated in the case. He had no role in the creation of this app or any fake accounts. He is just a student," his lawyer Dinesh Prajapati told PTI.
Prajapati also denied that Jha knew Shweta.
The Bulli Bai app (now blocked by GitHub) is the second case of this kind of sexual harassment and cyber-bullying targeting women from the minority community.
A similar app and website called 'Sulli Deals' had come to light last year.
Amid outrage, the Delhi Police has sought details from the GitHub platform about the developers of the 'Bulli Bai' mobile application and also asked Twitter to block and remove related 'offensive contents'.
The police also sought from Twitter information about the account handler who first tweeted about the app.
Leaders from across the political spectrum condemned this cyber harassment and called for strict action against the culprits.
Terming the matter as 'serious', the Delhi Minorities Commission has issued a notice to Delhi police chief Rakesh Asthana seeking an action-taken report by January 10.
On Tuesday, Maharashtra Home Minister Dilip Walse-Patil and Minister of State for Home Satej Patil said strict action will be taken against the culprits.
Satel Patil praised the 'prompt action' by the Mumbai police, and said there seemed to be a 'much bigger network' behind such coordinated crimes and the city police will unearth the 'entire nexus that is enabling hate crimes against women in our country'.