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Shabir Ibrahim Kaskar (died 12 February 1981) was a notorious Indian criminal based in
Mumbai Mumbai ( ; ), also known as Bombay ( ; its official name until 1995), is the capital city of the Indian state of Maharashtra. Mumbai is the financial capital and the most populous city proper of India with an estimated population of 12 ...
. He was the brother of Dawood Ibrahim, leader of the D-Company. The rise of the brothers in Mumbai's underworld and the sympathetic attitude of the Mumbai police department toward them evoked the jealousy and resentment of other established gang members from the Pathan gang that dominated the South Mumbai area. The inter-gang rivalry grew to such an extent that Manya Surve and his gang, along with Amirzada and Alamzeb, plotted to kill Shabir and Dawood. On 12 February 1981, they shot Shabir at a petrol pump in Prabhadevi. The murder marked an important chapter in Mumbai's underworld as it unleashed a gruesome gang war between Ibrahim's gang and the Pathan gang, leading to a spate of shootouts until the retired don,
Karim Lala Karim Lala (1911 – 19 February 2002), born Abdul Karim Sher Khan in the Samalam Village of the Shegal District of Kunar Province, Afghanistan, was infamous as one of the three "mafia dons of Mumbai" in India for more than two decades fr ...
, requested a truce. Eventually the Pathan gang ceded dominance to Ibrahim's gang.


Early life and entry into crime

Shabir Ibrahim Kaskar, the son of a police constable in the CID department at Azad Maidan police station named Ibrahim Kaskar, who routinely exercised severe corporal punishment on his sons, hailed from
Maharashtra Maharashtra () is a state in the western peninsular region of India occupying a substantial portion of the Deccan Plateau. It is bordered by the Arabian Sea to the west, the Indian states of Karnataka and Goa to the south, Telangana to th ...
and belonged to the Konkani Muslim community. The family had eight children and were perennially impoverished. Shabir and his younger brother, Dawood, were school dropouts and often spent their days wandering in the streets of Dongri-Bhendi Bazar. In those days, people lived in fear and awe of Karim Lala, the leader of the Pathan gang and
Haji Mastan Haji Mastan, popularly known as Sultan Mirza, was an organised crime gang leader, originally from Tamil Nadu and based in Bombay. He was one of the infamous trio of mafia gang leaders in Bombay for over two decades from the 1960s to the early 1 ...
, the smuggler who enjoyed a cult following among the impoverished Muslim youths in South Mumbai including Shabir and Dawood. They and their friends called their group the "Young Company". Their father requested Haji Mastan to give his wastrel sons decent employment. On Mastan's instructions, they worked in an electronic shop at Manish Market for some time, but soon went back to their petty crime and mob fights. Soon they found their way into the Pathan gang where they did odd jobs often transporting contraband and illegal goods.


Rivalry with the Pathan gang

The Pathan gang was known by Karim Lala who was supported by his Pathan cronies like Amirzada, Alamzeb, Samad Khan, Saeed Batla, and Ayub Lala. The Ibrahim brothers worked with Bashu Dada and other gangsters. As sons of a police constable and due to the Pathan gangs' increasing violence and notoriety, Dawood would gain the support of the Mumbai police and develop what was seen at the time as a symbiotic relationship to clean up Mumbai city of its “trash”, term used to describe criminals who target innocents and law enforcement."'Dongri to Dubai: Six Decades Of The Mumbai Mafia, the rise of Dawood Ibrahim'"
Accessed 22 April 2025.
By some accounts, Mumbai police officers decided to deliberately turn a blind eye to the criminal activities of the brothers while using their help to target the larger Pathan gang. This resulted in the Ibrahim brothers committing attacks against the Pathan gang with immunity and gaining the support of the general public, law enforcement and local newspapers who hailed them as the "protectors of the community". A journalist who supported the brothers and helped paint them as heroes was Iqbal Naatiq, who played a role in bringing together the police and Ibrahim brothers to combat the Pathans, whom he felt unnecessarily targeted innocent civilians. After Naatiq tipped off the police about Ayub Lala and Saeed Batla’s illegal gambling and liquor dens, they kidnapped Naatiq and stabbed him to death, reportedly 67 times.


References


External links


SAW Original trailer
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kaskar, Shabir Ibrahim Criminals from Mumbai Indian Muslims D-Company 1981 deaths Year of birth missing