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Addressing a press conference, Malik also said that his son-in-law Sameer Khan, who was recently granted bail in a drugs case after nine months, will move the high court to seek quashing of charges leveled against him by the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB).
Khan was arrested by the NCB in January this year in an alleged drug case. He got bail last month.
Apart from the recent drugs bust onboard a cruise liner off the Mumbai coast, that led to the arrest of Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan’s son Aryan Khan, the NCB last year investigated a drug case linked to the death of actor Sushant Singh Rajput and several other matters related to narcotics involving high-profile people.
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On Wednesday, the minister alleged that the “NCB has malafide intentions and is involved in only selective leaks to frame people”.
He also said that his security was beefed up after he started getting “threats” when he raised doubts over the NCB”s investigations.
Referring to the bail order issued by an NDPS court in connection with the case involving his son-in-law Sameer Khan, Malik said there was “no prima facie evidence of a drug syndicate”.
It is surprising that an agency like the NCB cannot differentiate between drugs that fall under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act and tobacco-related items, the NCP leader said.
“It (NCB) said ganja was seized (in the case involving Sameer Khan), but there was none. I just had to make things clear today after the bail order, since the BJP was targeting me over my son-in-law when I raised issues about the NCB’s fake case of the cruise drug party,” the NCP leader said.
Malik also claimed his family faced trauma and stigma due to the NCB.