- Chhota Rajan
-
Rajendra Sadashiv Nikalje
Chota rajanBorn Maharashtra, India Occupation Smuggler, drug trafficking Rajendra Sadashiv Nikalje alias Chhota Rajan (Translation: Little Rajan) is the boss of a major crime syndicate based in India. He is a former key aide and lieutenant of Dawood Ibrahim. Starting as a petty thief and bootlegger working for Rajan Nair, also known as Bada Rajan (Big Rajan). Chhota Rajan took over the reins of Bada Rajan's gang after Bada Rajan's murder. Later, he was affiliated with and operated at the behest of Dawood in Mumbai and eventually fled India to Dubai in 1988. He is wanted for many criminal cases that include extortion, murder, smuggling, drug trafficking and film finance. His brother is said to produce films financed by Rajan. He is also wanted in 17 murder cases and several more attempted murders.
He parted ways with Dawood Ibrahim after the latter's involvement in the 1993 terrorist attack on innocent civilians in Mumbai. Chhota Rajan and Dawood Ibrahim are now considered be arch-rivals, with a long and bloody feud between their respective crime syndicates.
Contents
Education
Chhota Rajan graduate from M.J.College,Jalgaon.[1]
Criminal career
Chhota Rajan started his criminal career by peddling cinema tickets in black in the 1980s.[2] Then he met mentor Bada Rajan under whom he learned the tricks of the trade. Once Bada Rajan was killed, Nikalje received the throne and the title—Chhota Rajan. For a short period, Dawood Ibrahim, Rajan and Arun Gawli worked together. Then Gawli’s elder brother Papa Gawli was murdered over a drug deal and a rift formed. Rajan went to Dubai—his family is still here apart from his wife in 1989 to attend the wedding of Noora, Dawood’s brother. He never returned. With the serial blasts flinging a spanner into the works, Dawood and Rajan fell out. There were even reports that he tipped off the Research and Analysis Wing about Dawood’s network. The Dawood-Rajan party was over, the messy end coming in September 2000, with Shakeel’s attack on Rajan in his Bangkok hotel room.[3]
Split with Dawood
Rajan parted ways with Dawood Ibrahim, after the 1993 Mumbai bombings, blaming him for anti Hindu and anti national acts. It is speculated that religious differences between the two - Rajan is a Hindu Mahar and Dawood, a Muslim - contributed to the split. The break up between him and Ibrahim supposedly took place after Dawood's involvement in the 1993 bomb blast came into the spotlight and Dawood became the most wanted man in India. After the split, Rajan formed his own gang. Reports of bloody shootouts between Rajan and Dawood's hoodlums have been common since the split. In 1994, Rajan lured one of Dawood's favorites - the flamboyantly charming, yet dreaded young Pathan "narco-terrorist" Phillu Khan alias Bakhtiyar Ahmed Khan- to a hotel room in Bangkok, where he was tortured to death having being betrayed by his closest aide and sidekick Mangesh "Mangya" Pawar.
Both Phillu and Mangya were involved in the 1993 blasts as Police had filed cases on 15 March 1993 [4] alleging their involvement in the blasts.
Assassination Attempt
In September 2001, Dawood tracked down Rajan in Bangkok. Sharad Shetty, used his links with Mumbai based hotelier Vinod Shetty to track down Rajan in Bangkok,[5] Dawood's aide Chhota Shakeel then led the hit. Posing as pizza delivery men they gunned down trusted Rajan hitman Rohit Varma and his wife.[5] However their aim of killing Rajan failed, with Rajan making a dare-devil escape through the hotel's roof and fire-escape. He then recovered in the hospital and slipped away to evade capture.[6]
Dawood Ibrahim confirmed the attack on telephone to rediff.com, saying Rajan tried to escape by jumping out of the window of the first-floor room where he was attacked. He, however, broke his back in the fall and was taken to hospital, the don said.
Rajan Strikes Back
This failed assassination attempt proved costly for Dawood. Chhota Rajan's associates tracked down and shot dead Vinod Shetty in 2001 in Mumbai, as well as Sunil Soans - another Dawood associate. Both Vinod and Sunil had provided information to Dawood's associates of Rajan's whereabouts.[5]
While the killings of Vinod Shetty and Sunil Soans did not significantly disrupt D-Company, on January 19, 2003, Chhota Rajan's associates then gunned down Sharad Shetty - Dawood's chief finance manager and money-laundering agent - at the India Club in Dubai.[5] This brazen killing was an emblematic of the shift of power between Dawood and Rajan. Not only was the execution in a very public setting, it was at a location that Dawood considered his operational backyard. Intelligence reports have suggested that Sharad Shetty's death was a crippling blow to D-Company, since much financial and monetary information of the crime syndicate operations managed by Sharad Shetty was never fully recovered by Dawood.[5]
While the Indian government has no overt links to Rajan, the Intelligence Bureau, India's internal intelligence agency is suspected of having passed information they collected of Dawood's operations to Chhota Rajan when they've found so to be convenient to weaken Dawood. Chhota Rajan claims himself to be a staunch Indian.
Health
As of 11th October 2011, Chhota Rajan is admitted to a hospital in Europe after he complains of Abdominal pain.[7]
References
- ^ "‘I’m doing good work for country’". Indianexpress.com. 2003-10-10. http://www.indianexpress.com/oldStory/33156/. Retrieved 2010-08-08.
- ^ "Rajan's Ganpati show-of-strength diminishes". Times of India. 23 August 2003. http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2003-08-23/mumbai/27196477_1_ganesh-pandals-ashok-satardekar-sahyadri-krida-mandal. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
- ^ http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=91939
- ^ "1993: Information from". Answers.com. http://www.answers.com/topic/1993. Retrieved 2010-08-08.
- ^ a b c d e [1][dead link]
- ^ "Shetty helped injured Rajan get out of hospital: police". Hindustan Times. 17 August 2011. http://www.hindustantimes.com/Shetty-helped-injured-Rajan-get-out-of-hospital-police/Article1-734413.aspx. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
- ^ "Chhota Rajan admitted to hospital in Europe". The Times of India. 2 November 2011. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mumbai/Chhota-Rajan-admitted-to-hospital-in-Europe/articleshow/10573891.cms. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
Categories:- Fugitives wanted by India
- Indian drug traffickers
- Indian smugglers
- Living people
- Indian mob bosses
- People from Maharashtra
- Crime in Maharashtra
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