Bomb scare at Mumbai's Mantralaya turns out to be hoax, farmer held

The caller allegedly wanted to draw the attention of the administration to his repeated pleas for compensation after his land was acquired.
Mantralaya, Mumbai
Mantralaya, Mumbai
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Mumbai Police personnel on Sunday conducted a search operation at the Maharashtra government Secretariat in the city after a caller, later identified as a farmer from Nagpur district, claimed that a bomb was planted in the building, which turned out to be a hoax call, officials said. "Around 12.40 pm, the Disaster Management Control, Mantralaya, received a call from an unidentified caller claiming that a bomb was planted in the Mantralaya," Mumbai Police said in a statement. Following the threat call, security was beefed up at the Mantralaya, an official said.

Teams of police personnel along with the Bomb Detection and Disposal Squad (BDDS) reached the spot and conducted a search operation, but it turned out to be a hoax call, it said. "Search operation at the Mantralaya premises is completed. No suspicious object has been found," it added.

A case was registered at the Marine Drive police station under sections 182 (False information, with intent to cause public servant to use his lawful power to the injury of another person), 505(1)(b) (Statement conducting to public mischief and 506 (Punishment for criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

Meanwhile, the caller was traced to Nagpur in east Maharashtra who turned out to be a farmer who allegedly made the call to draw the attention of the administration to his repeated pleas demanding compensation for his acquired land, a Nagpur rural police official said.

"The farmer was detained within two hours of making the hoax call. He confessed to making the call and said that for a long time, he was worried about the compensation of the acquired land. But no one was listening to his pleas. He made this call to draw the attention of the government and the administration," the official said.

The farmer is identified as Sagar Mandhre (40), who had owned seven acres of land in Makardhokda area of Umred tehsil in Nagpur district. "He sold some part of that land to a man while some portion was acquired by the Western Coalfields Ltd (WCL) in 1997. The farmer told the Umred police that the WCL had not issued compensation to his acquired land," the official said.

He said the farmer claimed that he was suffering from some serious bone disease and needs money for medical treatment. The farmer claimed that he had been trying hard since the last two decades to get the compensation for his land and wrote several letters to the administration, the official said. In the past, Mandhre had issued threats to set himself on fire on Independence Day and Republic Day on multiple occasions, he added.

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