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Borivali-Padgha : ウィキペディア英語版 | Borivali-Padgha
Borivali-Padgha, (Padgha also spelt Padghe), are twin villages in Bhiwandi taluka of Thane a district in Maharashtra an Indian state. The terminus station of the eponymous Chandrapur–Padghe HVDC transmission system is located there.〔 Adhikari, T., Isacsson, G., Ambekar, V.D., The Chandrapur-Padghe HVDC Bipole Transmission, CIGRÉ Symposium on HVDC, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, September 1999.〕 Borivali-Padgha are located 90 km from Mumbai and 15 km from the textile manufacturing town of Bhiwandi, on the Mumbai-Agra national highway number 3. The villages are surrounded by the jungles on the slopes of the Mahuli hills. The villages have a population of 7000, 95 percent of whom are Konkani Muslims.〔 According to a 2001 Times of India news report, Students Islamic Movement of India had for 20 years a powerful operational setup in Padgha, with an office and library with a purpose of being used to recruit activists from all over India, who would then operate from Mumbai. This office was sealed in 2001.〔 Five of those accused to have participated in the conspiracy that lead to the 2003 Mumbai train bombing and two other blasts in Vile Parle and Mumbai Central areas of Mumbai including the prime accused Saquib Nachan belong to Padgha. Majbool Kamal Khan, of Siddharthnagar, Uttar Pradesh a Karate black belt, who is accused to have assembled explosive devices for the blasts is alleged to have received training in Padgha. Saquib Nachan had in an plea application to a POTA court expressed his desire to provide the land he owned in Padgha to bury the bodies of attackers killed by Indian security personnel during the 2008 Mumbai attacks, Nachan had also offered to perform ''namaz-e-janaz''. The court ruled rejecting the application declaring it beyond its jurisdiction to allow so. ==References==
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