Gopal Rajwani

Gopal Rajwani (died 25 January 2000) was a criminal-politician with the Shiv Sena party, from Ulhasnagar, Maharashtra (a suburb of Mumbai). Formerly associated with the ganglord Dawood Ibrahim,[1] he joined the Shiv Sena in 1996. He was killed as he was appearing in a court case at Ulhasnagar in January 2000.

Life

Rajwani began his life selling papadums in Ulhasnagar. At one point, he met gangster Govind Vachani and rose rapidly in the crime world.[2] He later joined the criminal-politician Pappu Kalani and was arrested in 1982-83 for the murder of the editor A V Narayan of Blitz magazine.[1][2] The case could not be sustained, however; no witnesses would come forward to testify and he was acquitted.

In 1985, he fell out with Kalani over division of extortion money.[1] Meanwhile, Pappu Kalani had become politically powerful with the Indian National Congress party - he was to be elected from Ulhasnagar the following year.[3] That April, Rajwani was arrested in an extortion case, apparently at Kalani's bidding. As Rajwani was being escorted to the Vithalwadi police station in a rickshaw, Kalani arranged for his men to attack him with bombs and guns.[1] Rajwani survived the attack, but was seriously injured[1] and was admitted to the JJ Hospital. Here, he met Haji Mastan, a notorious smuggler and senior don of that time. Haji Mastan took Rajwani under his wings and arranged for him to go to Dubai.

In Dubai, he met Dawood Ibrahim and began helping him buy real estate in Mumbai. Among the properties he negotiated was a flat in Lokhandwala Complex, which was to be the scene of a famous shootout where the "encounter" specialist (Policeman known for killing off gangsters) Aftaab Ahmed Khan gunned down six of Dawood's aides including Maya Dolas.[4] Much of the fourteen-hour encounter was televised live and made Khan a celebrity.

In April 1989, the Kalani family leader, Pappu's uncle Dudhichand Kalani, was murdered, allegedly by Gopal Rajwani's gang,[5] at the instance of Gop Behrani.[2] This led to reprisal killings - as many as 22 murders in five months. It was said during this period that "there would be a killing in Ulhasnagar every Tuesday."[3] It was during this period that Pappu Kalani emerged as the leader of his own organized crime gang.

In 1992, Pappu Kalani was arrested for the murder of Rajwani henchman Maruthi Jadhav[6] (and subsequently charged in seven other murders). Pappu was in jail for nine years, and in this period, Rajwani then returned to Ulhasnagar. He joined the Shiv Sena in 1995, and emerged as a top leader of the party in Ulhasnagar.

On 24 January 2000, around 11 AM, he was getting off from his car to attend court at the First Class Magistrate's court in Ulhasnagar, when he was attacked by four gunmen, and died of injuries in the head, chest, neck and back.[1]

It is widely believed that Pappu Kalani, recently elected MLA from Ulhasnagar, although in jail at the time, had masterminded his murder.[1]

gollark: You can actually apply this to lots of things, like how the memetic evolution process doesn't select for "good" ideas but good-at-spreading ideas.
gollark: negative_utilitarianism_irl
gollark: They won't do their best to work out exactly what you intended and do it. The optimization process will produce things which do well at the optimization process.
gollark: Exactly.
gollark: And you DO NOT WANT your AI to be working out the most convenient loopholey way to satisfy the letter (well, the code) of "do not harm humans".

References

  1. Jake Khan, Ulhasnagar (25 January 2000). "Sena leader Gopal Rajwani shot dead". Ulhasnagar: India Abroad. Archived from the original on 9 September 2012. Retrieved 27 May 2007.
  2. Yogesh Pawar (3 March 1999). "Three Ps rule Ulhas: Pelf, Politicians & Pappu". Indian Express. Retrieved 24 May 2007.
  3. Girish Kuber (9 January 2007). "Pappu's Ulhasnagar gambit may backfire". The Economic Times. Retrieved 24 May 2007.
  4. S Hussain Zaidi (5 February 1998). ""Mr Controversy" seeks a clean ticket". Indian Express. Archived from the original on 4 June 2007. Retrieved 23 May 2007.
  5. Justices K.T. Thomas & D.P. Mohapatra (2 March 2001). "Suresh alias Pappu Bhudharmal Kalani v. State of Maharashtra". Supreme Court of India. Retrieved 30 May 2007.
  6. Tanushree Chakraborty (6 September 2001). "Pappu Kalani is free: bluster intact, not his base". Indian Express. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 24 May 2007.
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