Home Latest News India Expels Pakistani Visa Official for ‘Espionage’

India Expels Pakistani Visa Official for ‘Espionage’

by AFP
Pakistan High Commissioner to India Abdul Basit. Prakash Singh—AFP

Pakistan High Commissioner to India Abdul Basit. Prakash Singh—AFP

Police official claims Mehmood Akhtar was detained with information on deployment of India’s border security forces.

India announced on Thursday it was expelling a Pakistani visa official for suspected spying after he was briefly detained carrying sensitive defense documents, with tensions between the neighboring nations already running high.

New Delhi police said the official had been recruiting Indian nationals for two-and-a-half years to spy for Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in return for cash. “Delhi police crime branch has busted an espionage racket run by a kingpin working in the Pakistan High Commission,” said Ravindra Yadav, joint commissioner of police on crime.

The official, named as Mehmood Akhtar, was detained on Wednesday with documents in his possession on Indian troop deployment along the border, Yadav told a press conference in Delhi. “They used to meet once in a month at a pre-decided place to exchange documents and money,” he said.

Akhtar was later released, he added.

India’s foreign secretary Subrahmanyam Jaishankar summoned Pakistan’s high commissioner to inform him of the decision to expel the official within 48 hours.

“FS [foreign secretary] summons Pak High Commissioner to convey that Pak High Commission staffer has been declared persona non grata for espionage activities,” Indian foreign ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup said on Twitter.

Tensions between India and Pakistan have soared since a raid last month on an Indian army base near the de-facto border dividing Kashmir killed 19 soldiers, the worst such attack in more than a decade. India blamed militants in Pakistan and said it had responded by carrying out strikes across the heavily militarized border, although Islamabad denies these took place.

Indian and Pakistani troops regularly exchange fire across the border known as the Line of Control in Kashmir, but sending ground troops over the line is rare.

Yadav said two Indian nationals from the northern state of Rajasthan were also arrested, and that Akhtar had planned to meet his Indian co-conspirators at the Delhi zoo to exchange the information and cash. He said Akhtar was carrying maps that showed the deployment of India’s Border Security Forces (BSF) and army soldiers.

“A list of jawans posted at the border along with soldiers who had retired from service was also recovered,” Yadav said.

Pakistan’s High Commissioner Abdul Basit lodged a “strong protest” on Thursday with the Indian foreign ministry and said the detention of the official contravened diplomatic conventions, a Pakistani diplomatic source said. “The High Commissioner denied the accusation and said we [the commission] never engage in activity that is incompatible with its diplomatic status,” the source told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The official has been given 48 hours to leave the country, the source said.

The expulsion comes as an Indian soldier died on Thursday from injuries he received during an exchange of fire with Pakistani soldiers across the border. “A BSF jawan was killed today by splinter injuries he received during cross border firing from Pakistan,” Indian BSF officer Manoj Kumar told AFP.

Such firings have increased in recent months as relations between the rivals have plummeted.

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