The Asian Age

Pak mission spy caught, told to leave India; 3 others held

Akhtar sent details on BSF border deployment to ISI

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENTS

India declared on Thursday Pakistan high commission staffer Mehmood Akhtar “persona non-grata”, and asked him to leave the country with his family in 48 hours, a day after he and two Indian co-conspirato­rs were caught in Delhi on espionage charges.

The two Indians — Maulana Ramzan and Subhash Jangir of Rajasthan — were booked under the Official Secrets Act and sent to police custody for 12 days. A third person, Shoaib, part of the ring, was detained in the border state, and was being brought to Delhi.

The action coincides with rising tension and fatal border skirmishes between the two nucleararm­ed countries after terrorists killed 19 Indian soldiers last month, prompting India to launch a global diplomatic offensive, and carry out anti-terror surgical strikes across the LoC.

The police caught Akhtar receiving sensitive documents pertaining to the deployment of the Indian military and paramilita­ry forces along the Indo-Pak border from the two Indians working for Pakistan’s spy agency ISI. He was detained for questionin­g but released because he enjoys diplomatic immunity.

Foreign secretary S Jaishankar summoned Pakistan high commission­er Abdul Basit, informed him of what had happened and “strongly conveyed that no high commission member can indulge in such activities. Pakistan rejected the charges and condemned the Indian action, accusing India of trying to “shrink diplomatic space for the working of the Pakistan High Commission”.

Pakistan alleged that the staffer had been “lifted and manhandled”. But India swiftly clarified that he had been “treated with utmost courtesy”, adding that the Vienna Convention (for protection

of diplomats) had been fully adhered to. Pointing out that Akhtar “was caught red-handed”, New Delhi said, “We are happy that we nipped the ISI spy ring in the bud.”

Akhtar had been working as an assistant to Pakistan’s counsellor (Trade) Farukh Habib in the high commission. He and the two Indian accomplice­s were picked up from the Delhi Zoo.

With speculatio­n being

Continued from Page 1 rife that more Pakistan high commission employees could be involved in the espionage ring, sources said investigat­ions were continuing and that there could be more arrests.

When asked why Akhtar was released, sources in the MEA said he may not be a diplomat in the “traditiona­l sense” and may not even have a diplomatic passport but said he was allowed to go as he “enjoyed some level of diplomatic immunity” on account of being a staffer at the high commission.

Sources in the Delhi police told news agencies that they did not rule out possible involvemen­t of some BSF personnel in the racket, as they believe Akhtar and his accomplice­s could not have got hold of security deployment details unless somebody in the border force was leaking them.

When caught, Akhtar first identified himself as Mehmood Rajput of Chandni Chowk, but the Adhaar card he produced turned out to be fake. He admitted that he had joined the Baloch regiment of the Pakistan Army in 1997 and came on deputation to the ISI in 2013. He was posted in September 2013 to the Pakistan high commission.

He recruited Indians for spying and sent informatio­n to Pakistan. The module had been active for 18 months, and came on police radar six months ago.

Last year, the police busted an ISI spy ring in the Pakistan high commission and arrested five persons.

 ??  ?? A copy of an Aadhaar card of Pakistan high commission staffer Mehmood Akhtar. When caught, Akhtar first identified himself as Mehmood Rajput of Chandni Chowk, but the Aadhaar card he produced turned out to be fake. He admitted that he had joined the...
A copy of an Aadhaar card of Pakistan high commission staffer Mehmood Akhtar. When caught, Akhtar first identified himself as Mehmood Rajput of Chandni Chowk, but the Aadhaar card he produced turned out to be fake. He admitted that he had joined the...

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