Until he was arrested on the Nepal border in August, Indian Mujahideen leader Yasin Bhatkal was one of India's most-wanted terrorists. His arrest has been a vital breakthrough. If the contents of the 272-page charge sheet filed by the National Investigation Agency before a special court in Delhi on Friday are to be believed, Bhatkal is responsible for every major terror attack in the country since 2006 – some even before he is said to have joined the IM.Investigators probably realise that this might be their best chance to close cases that have remained unsolved for years.Since his arrest, Bhatkal he has been bundled from one city to another as NIA and Anti-Terrorism officials vie with each other to question him. So far, police in Bihar, Delhi, Bengaluru, Mumbai and Hyderabad have interrogated him. He is currently in custody in Mumbai.Scroll.in reported on some of Bhatkal's more fantastical confessions at the beginning of the year. Here are seven new facts about the IM that have been unearthed since then.As far as kidnappings go, anyone would have been hard put to find an easier high-profile target than Arvind Kejriwal. Fresh with his victory in the Delhi election in December, the chief minister had been vehement about refusing security cover. The IM apparently wanted to kidnap him to negotiate for Bhatkal’s release. Unfortunately, they did not get the memo about not leaking their plans to the police, who in turn leaked it on a strictly confidential basis to Kejriwal, and then proceeded to parade the information to the media that evening. As Kejriwal continued to refuse security, it is unclear why IM did not manage to carry out this plot. Perhaps they were waiting for him to resign.The Gujarat chief minister is not just first on the IM's list of people to assassinate. He occupies positions two to ten as well.The newest allegation against Bhatkal, released just on Sunday, claim that his grouses extended beyond India. While on the run in Nepal, he began to plan an attack on Lumbini, the birthplace of Buddha, to avenge the massacre of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. Among the long list of charges against him, he is alleged to have practiced his bomb-making skills at a series of blasts in Hyderabad in 2007. The police recovered 19 undetonated bombs across the city after the event. One of the two bombs that did explode was at Lumbini Park.Bhatkal and associates were allegedly unable to carry out any attack on any IPL match at Mumbai in 2011 because of high security at the entrances. They did, however, get their value for money in another way. Mumbai Indians thrashed Pune Warriors by seven wickets on the last ball, and it was by all accounts a gripping match.It cannot be said of Bhatkal that he was distracted only by glamour. Even while plotting to create IPL’s next big scandal, he apparently had his sights on a police van as well. It was one of four other targets in Mumbai on 13 July 2011, when serial blasts shook the city yet again. But the van moved away before he could reach it.Bhatkal is allegedly the brains behind the IM’s bombs, which might explain why so many post-arrest IM plans have not taken off . He is apparently a dab hand with the internet as well. The only reason many Indians have heard of the social networking app Nimbuzz might be because of reports that IM operatives communicated via the app, in code language no less. The company, which is headquartered in New Delhi, says that a fifth of its users are from India. This might change with so much indirect publicity.This plot was narrowly foiled by Bhatkal’s arrest. The police discovered 50 magnets in an IM hideout. When asked what it was for, Bhatkal apparently confessed that the group planned to stick lethal bombs to an oil train and detonate it when it reached a major city. The two operatives who were meant to carry out this plan are on the run, and the police has confiscated the entire cache of magnets and explosives.