Parliament breach: Who are the six accused, and where they are from
The Parliament security breach was a well-planned and well-coordinated incident carried out by the six, staying at a rented house in Gurugram, say police officials
Six people hailing from different cities got together at a flat in Gurugram, a major satellite city of Delhi, after hatching a plan to intrude into Parliament on the anniversary of the December 13, 2001 attack on Wednesday.
Two of them -- Manoranjan D and Sagar Sharma -- jumped into the Lok Sabha chamber from the public gallery and opened smoke canisters, triggering panic among the MPs, while their accomplices -- Neelam and Amol Shinde -- sprayed coloured gas from canisters and shouted slogans outside the Parliament building.
Lalit and Vishal Sharma are suspected to be their associates, police sources said. Vishal has been detained from Gurugram in Haryana while Lalit is on the run.
All of them stayed at the rented house of Vishal Sharma and his wife Rakhi at Sector 7 in Gurugram.
Manoranjan D, hailing from Mysuru in Karnataka, completed his BE (Bachelor in Engineering) in 2016 and was looking after the family farm. He also worked in some firms in Delhi and Bengaluru, his family said.
He got the authorisation pass to enter Lok Sabha from the office of BJP MP Pratap Simha and introduced Sagar Sharma, who hails from Uttar Pradesh, as a friend.
Father says son is innocent
His father Devaraje Gowda, however, claimed that his son was honest and truthful and always desired to do good for society.
"Hang my son if he has done wrong. That Parliament is ours. People like you all have built it. Leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, and Nehru had toiled to build it. Whoever does it (attack) is condemnable. We will not accept it," Gowda told reporters in Mysuru.
"My son is a good boy. He is honest and truthful. His only desire is to do good for the society and sacrifice for the society," he added.
Sagar Sharma (28) left his house in Lucknow's Ramnagar a few days ago to attend a "protest" in Delhi. However, his family said they were unaware of his involvement in the Parliament security breach.
"I heard my brother telling my mother that he was going to Delhi to attend a protest a few days ago," said Sagar Sharma's minor sister.
"My brother drove an e-rickshaw and earlier used to work in Bengaluru," the sister added.
According to police, Sagar Sharma, along with his sister and parents, lived in a rented house in the Ramnagar area and his father Roshan Lal is a carpenter.
Twenty-five-year-old Shinde had left his village in Maharashtra's Latur district, saying he was going to Delhi to take part in an army recruitment drive, police said.
Shinde, along with Neelam of Haryana, shouted: "Tanashahi Nahi Chalegi" (dictatorship will not be allowed), "Bharat Mata Ki Jai" and "Jai Bheem, Jai Bharat" outside Parliament.
After the incident in Delhi, a team of Latur police visited Shinde's house in Zari village.
Shinde took part in farmers' protest
Shinde is a BA graduate. He did odd jobs as a daily wager while preparing for police and army recruitment exams, police said.
His parents told police that Shinde left home on December 9, saying he was going to Delhi for an army recruitment drive, police said.
Family members of Neelam said she had earlier participated in several agitations, including the farmers' movement.
Neelam's mother Saraswati Devi told reporters at her house in Ghaso Khurd village in Jind that she came to know about the incident through the media.
Neelam (35) was staying in a PG accommodation in Hisar for the last five months where she was preparing for competitive examinations, her brother Ram Niwas said.
"I got a call from my elder brother to switch on the TV immediately. He told me that Neelam was arrested in Delhi," Niwas told PTI.
According to Niwas, she actively participated in farmers' protests.
He said that his sister, who has cleared the National Eligibility Test (NET), had visited the village two days ago, but she did not talk about the Parliament protest.
Neelam's family members claimed that she has also done Masters, MEd and MPhil.
"Her certificate of Haryana Teachers Eligibility Test had expired. I asked her to go to Hisar and get coaching for the same," said Niwas, who does livestock farming.
A villager at Ghaso Khurd said Neelam had once gone with some villagers to Khatkar Toll Plaza during the farmers' protest against now-repealed farm laws.
Neelam has three sisters and two brothers. His father Kohar Singh works as a 'halwai' (confectioner) in Uchana Mandi, the villager said.
Police sources said the Parliament security breach was a well-planned and well-coordinated incident carried out by the six people, all of whom were in contact with each other over Instagram and other social media platforms.
The accused devised the plan a few days ago and they carried out a recce before coming to Parliament on Wednesday, they said.
"Five of them stayed at Vishal's residence in Gurugram before coming to Parliament. As per the plan, all six wanted to go inside parliament but only two got passes," the source said.
Interrogation of Shinde revealed that the six accused had known each other for the past four years through social media.
An official said Vishal Sharma earlier worked as a driver in an export company but of late he drove an autorickshaw. His neighbours claimed that he was a drunkard and often quarrelled with his wife.
Sagar Sharma visited Vishal Sharma's house often and they were in contact for a long time. Vishal Sharma has a criminal background, official sources said.
"Vishal and Neelam are natives of Hisar district," the official said.
(With Agency inputs)