Sunday, September 2, 2012

The rise and fall of Gawli

The rise and fall of Gawli

The Arun Gawli gang, which was once feared by businessmen and builders, seems to have lost its teeth.
One of the reasons for the gang’s downfall, according to the police, was that Gawli tried to legitimise himself through politics.
“Many of his men were killed in encounters and gang rivalry. As he was the only person from the underworld left in the city, he thought it would be better to get into politics. He formed the Akhil Bharatiya Sena in 1997, and since then he has been lying low and discreetly doing extortion through his cronies,” said Rakesh Maria, ATS chief.
“In the early 1980s, Gawli was a protégé of gangster Rama Naik, who was working for Dawood Ibrahim. But Naik and Dawood got into loggerheads when two people approached them separately to settle a property dispute,” said a senior police officer. Dawood got the deal in favour of his man, which irked Rama Naik. “When Naik was killed in an encounter in 1987, Gawli assumed it was at Dawood’s behest. He took over the gang and declared a war against him.”
Gawli extended his terror in central Mumbai such as Tardeo, Parel, Kalachowkie, which was also a stronghold of Amar Naik. “Gawli rose to power after he killed the owner of a garment company owner and then in 1984, he tried to kill Ashwin Naik, which left the latter paralysed. Gawli grew stronger in the 1990s as he was the only one who stood against the don. He also got Dawood’s brother-in-law Ibrahim Parkar killed,” said Maria. In 1993, Chhota Rajan split with Dawood and joined hands with Gawli and they stood against the don.
“It was sheer luck that while making inquiries about a gang of extortionists, they spilled the beans about their involvement in Sena corporator Kamlakar Jamsandekar’s murder. This led us to Gawli in 2008 and the end of his crime career,” said Deven Bharti, inspector general of police.

Daddy’s game up
Gawli is first city gangster to be convicted under MCOCA & TADA

Gangster-turned-politican Arun Gulabrao Gawli has entered the city’s legal history.
When Gawli was given life imprisonment for his involvement in the murder of Shiv Sena corporator Kamlakar Jamsandekar on Friday, he became the first city-based gangster to be convicted under the draconian Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA).
He was also the first gang leader to be convicted under the Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act (TADA) in 1990.
Recounting the dramatic arrest of Gawli in 1990 for possessing a sten gun, retired assistant commissioner of police Suresh Walishetty said: “Gawli’s brother Papa had an affair with a woman, whose husband was a close associate of don Dawood Ibrahim. Her husband got in touch with the D-company and got Papa killed in Mahim in1990.”
Gawli wanted to avenge his brother’s death. “Soon, he got the registration number of the car that was used by the assailants. The car belonged to Manoj Kulkarni, a Dawood gang member, but he was into hiding,” said Walishetty.
When Gawli learnt that Kulkarni had come to his VP Road home to attend his sister’s wedding, he laid a trap. Gawli’s men reached Kulkarni’s home in a white Ambassador, which was then the police’s official vehicle, posing as crime branch officers.
“Gawli’s aides Sada Pawle, Vijay Tandel and Chhota Babu brought Kulkarni to Dagdi Chawl and he was interrogated in the special inquiry room. After Kulkarni admitted of having killed Papa, they took him to Tardeo and bumped off in April 1990,” said Walishetty.
In July 1990, the police learnt about Gawli’s involvement in Kulkarni’s murder, and they raided Dagdi Chawl. Six teams of the SRPF looked for him. “After a four-hour search, we noticed the sofa in one of the rooms moving. On opening it, we found Gawli inside with a sten gun,” Walishetty said. “Gawli was sentenced to seven years’ jail by the TADA court. But he appealed in the Supreme Court and was released on technical grounds. Gawli was the first don to be held in TADA case.”

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