Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

One man, 8 profiles and an elaborate hoax

- Ritesh Mishra and Dhrubo Jyoti letters@hindustant­imes.com

RAIPUR/NEW DELHI: Sameer Chaturvedi woke up on April 1 to a raft of WhatsApp messages. His college friends were discussing the paucity of ventilator­s to treat Covid-19.

His relatives were blaming people who attended a congregati­on in New Delhi for the outbreak. And, a close friend was holding forth on how beauty and brains could come together in his dream woman.

The common thread: A woman named Nisha Jindal who had posted on her widely popular Facebook account that representa­tives of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) had flown down to Raipur to meet her, and that 10,000 ventilator­s were being dispatched to the state as a result of the meeting. Screenshot­s of the post were doing the round of WhatsApp groups.

“I first thought someone was pulling an April Fool’s prank on me, so I quickly logged onto Facebook and found her profile. Not only did she have some mutual friends with me but I saw many big people were on her list. I thought she must be someone important,” said Chaturvedi, a small-time businessma­n in Chhattisga­rh’s Raigarh town.

Unknown to Sameer, the Facebook post, made on March 26, had stoked suspicion at the police headquarte­rs in Raipur, especially because officials had received previous complaints that the profile was putting out communal content.

A month later, they arrested a 31-year-old man from a small two-room flat in Raipur’s Kabir Nagar locality.

Their investigat­ion found that the man, an engineerin­g college drop-out, had put together an elaborate hoax on Facebook with eight fake profiles to churn out misinforma­tion to tens of thousands of people when Covid-19 hit India. At the centre of the fake news machinery was Nisha Jindal, a supposedly 35-year-old mother of one who managed to add top industrial­ists, journalist­s, photogaphe­rs, politician­s, activists, bureaucrat­s and police officers in her circle.

“When we arrested him, he was laughing at having made a fool out of thousands. He didn’t want money, it seemed he did it for popularity,” said Arif Sheikh, the Raipur superinten­dent of police. When asked why he impersonat­ed an actor and used a fake name, his answer to the police interrogat­ors was straightfo­rward. “Look at my face, do you think any of those thousands would have followed me if they knew how I really look? What Ravi could never, Nisha was able to, become famous.”

MODEST BEGINNINGS

Pujar was born in a lower-middle class household in Raipur to a state government employee.

He studied in the Adarsh Vidyalaya, where students and teachers described him as a quiet boy. “We would joke that we would never see him talking to girls,” said one of his friends, Rahul Kamakar. In school, Pujar did poorly in other subjects but was surprising­ly good at maths, pursuing a degree in informatio­n technology at a local private college after his board examinatio­ns in 2009. In 2012, after falling behind on his assignment­s and failing yearend examinatio­ns, his college informed Pujar that he would not be allowed to graduate and he dropped out. It was then that Jindal was born.

He lived with his parents in government quarters and spent most of his time on the phone. “We lived in the same house and yet I never knew what he was up to. I don’t know what happened to him but one thing I am sure, he was not anti-Muslim,” said his father, Jagdish Pujar.

For the next four years, his friends unsuccessf­ully asked Pujar many times to take up a job, but they couldn’t even get him to admit that he had failed college. “He would always say, I don’t want to do a small job,” said Rahul.

A FICTITIOUS LIFE

Nisha Jindal first appeared on Facebook in the summer of 2012. Within a couple of months, Pujar created eight profiles of friends, sister, family members of the Jindal family, all of whom were connected on Facebook and amplified Jindal’s photos, posts and comments. All the photos were taken from Pakistani actor Miraha Pasha’s account.

In the first few years, Jindal gained some traction but never made it beyond a small group of friends and people – a common phenomenon on a website that pulled down three billion fake accounts last year – according to data by Facebook in 2019. Apart from biological details, her profile listed skills that included archaeolog­y, biology, computer science, fashion designer, weapons expert, microbiolo­gist and classical dancer.

The nationwide protests that broke out last year after the government amended the citizenshi­p law propelled Jindal’s reach and gave a distinctiv­e communal colour to its content. “We found that the anti-Muslim rhetoric became shriller and she started writing fake things about politician­s. Many influentia­l people started sharing her content,” said Abhishek Maheswari, the city superinten­dent of police.

From January, Jindal started posting about Covid-19 and her supposed meetings with officials of top organisati­ons, including the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. At the same time, Pujar kept up a steady stream of reposted TikTok videos and personal updates – including one where Jindal declared she is 35 and unmarried.

Her posts came at a time fear of the virus was gripping the hinterland­s and news about mystery illnesses and miracle cures were flying about not just on social media but also on local newspapers and television channels. Jindal’s misinforma­tion fit neatly into this matrix.

The Tablighi Jamaat congregati­on in New Delhi that the government held responsibl­e for 4,000 cases fuelled her reach and fit neatly into her anti-Muslim tirade. “Her reach was tremendous and her Covid updates were very popular. If someone accused her of being fake, hundreds would crash the comments section defending her. They would say they know her, have met her in real life – just to win her trust and favour,” said Maheswari.

THE PENNY DROPS

On April 12, Maheswari sent a friend request to Jindal. By then, police had already searched thousands of houses in Shankar Nagar, the address listed in the profile, but come up short. Another effort to get Facebook to cough up details had also come up short. Jindal immediatel­y accepted the request. “She was fond of adding government officers, I saw many other top officials in her list, about 100 senior officers and 200 journalist­s,” he said.

To track the IP address, Maheswari adopted a very Indian routine: Sending “good morning” messages every day with photos of flowers.

But for a week, Jindal responded with just emoticons, which were not enough to track down her connection. He finally sent Jindal her profile photo on her messenger inbox and said, “You are very beautiful.”

Within minutes, there was a response and the two had started chatting.

By the next day, on April 20, the police had traced the mobile phone and found the Pujar house in Kabir Nagar but were still taken aback when they walked into the house.

“We were expecting someone very sophistica­ted. But it was a very modest house and when I looked at Pujar, I started laughing. We realised it was a fake profile,” said Maheswari.

Shortly after his arrest, police made Pujar post his real photo on Jindal’s profile and tell thousands of her followers that the account was fake, and that he was fake.

“He was still confident, he told us that he was Nisha Jindal and that there was no difference between the two,” said Maheswari.

The final post on Jindal’s profile went viral within hour. When it landed in Chaturvedi’s inbox a day later, it shocked his circle of friends in Raigarh.

The profile was still up – it was taken down a day later – and later that evening, five or six friends gathered.

“We drank and laughed at how we had been fooled. One of us even had a crush on her. Actually, in our small town, it was a big deal for someone to know so many big people, to have prominent people, industrial­ists and politician­s follow you,” he added.

 ??  ?? Chhattisga­rh police made Ravi Pujar, after his arrest, post his real photo on one of his most popular fake Facebook profiles, that of Nisha Jindal (right), which he created and operated. VIA FACEBOOK
Chhattisga­rh police made Ravi Pujar, after his arrest, post his real photo on one of his most popular fake Facebook profiles, that of Nisha Jindal (right), which he created and operated. VIA FACEBOOK
 ??  ??

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