The NIA arrested Soyab, a ward boy at Al Falah University, for aiding Red Fort bomber Dr. Umar Un Nabi. The arrest is the seventh in a terror conspiracy linked to a ₹415 crore fraud case.
Brajesh Mishra
The National Investigation Agency (NIA) has made a significant arrest in the Delhi Red Fort blast case, taking into custody Soyab, a ward boy employed at Al Falah University’s medical wing. Soyab is the seventh individual detained in the widening terror conspiracy and is accused of actively harboring and providing logistical aid to suicide bomber Dr. Umar Un Nabi in the critical days leading up to the November 10 attack that killed at least 14 people. His arrest confirms the terror module’s network extended beyond highly educated faculty members to key support staff within the institution.
Al Falah University has emerged as the operational hub of a sophisticated terror module. The discovery began with the identification of the bomber as Dr. Umar Un Nabi, an assistant professor at the medical college, whose attack was a panicked reaction after the prior arrest of several colleagues. The probe has since swept up three doctors—including Dr. Muzammil Shakil—and the university's founder, Jawad Ahmed Siddiqui, who was arrested by the Enforcement Directorate on separate charges of running a massive ₹415 crore education fraud scheme. Soyab's arrest now maps the lower-level support structure, showing how the "white-collar" plot relied on discreet campus logistics.
While the media focuses on the widening net of arrests, the deeper story is the "Institutionalized Deceit." Al Falah University was not just a recruitment base; it was a layered operational sanctuary where the founder was allegedly running a massive financial fraud scheme, while a small, core group of faculty and support staff ran a terror cell. The dual scandals—financial malpractice (₹415 crore fraud) and terror incubation—point to a catastrophic failure of governance and oversight. This allowed not just the faculty, but the entire institutional structure, from the Chairman to the support staff, to be co-opted for criminal ends.
The arrest of a ward boy signals that the investigation is now complete on the ground-level logistical chain, moving the probe toward financial and ideological masterminds. For the 600+ students and innocent faculty at Al Falah, the crisis is dire: their degrees and career prospects are in limbo, and their campus is now synonymous with terror. The ongoing probe will force a systemic review of private university hiring practices, security protocols, and the auditing mechanisms intended to prevent both financial fraud and radicalization on campuses.
When the person selling education is accused of fraud, and the person offering medical care is plotting an explosion, what is the moral cost of institutional neglect?
Who is the ward boy from Al Falah University arrested by the NIA?
The arrested individual is Soyab, a resident of Dhauj, Faridabad, who worked as a ward boy at the Al Falah University medical wing. He is the seventh person detained in connection with the Red Fort blast case.
Why was Soyab, the Al Falah University ward boy, arrested?
Soyab was arrested for harbouring suicide bomber Dr. Umar Un Nabi at his sister-in-law's house and providing him with essential logistical support in the days leading up to the November 10 attack. He routinely facilitated contact between the doctors and patients from the Mewat region.
What is the connection between Al Falah University and the Red Fort blast?
The university is the operational hub of the module. The bomber (Dr. Umar) and several co-conspirators (including Dr. Muzammil) were faculty members. The university's founder, Jawad Ahmed Siddiqui, was separately arrested for a ₹415 crore fraud scheme, which the Enforcement Directorate is examining for possible terror-financing links.
How many people have been arrested in the Delhi Red Fort blast case?
The National Investigation Agency (NIA) has arrested at least seven individuals so far, including multiple doctors, a ward boy, and the university's founder (arrested by the ED on separate charges).
News Coverage
Research & Analysis
Sign up for the Daily newsletter to get your biggest stories, handpicked for you each day.
Trending Now! in last 24hrs