Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Did Pak man cook up ISI spy story?

- Appu Esthose Suresh appu.suresh@htlive.com

INTELLIGEN­CE A decision will be taken on Monday if he will be deported to Dubai or given consular access to Pakistan high commission Ahmed is basically a Normally in the bookie. He was a cloth intelligen­ce world, we trader till 2015, and is only look for his utility and once a 10th pass. He is under his bona fides are medication for establishe­d, we offer him a neurologic­al problems. new identity, citizenshi­p.

Government officials said on Saturday they are almost certain that a man who turned up at the Delhi airport a day earlier and identified himself as a hit man of Pakistan’s ISI is not a spy but had cooked up the story to gain asylum in India.

Ahmed Mohammed, 38, arrived on a Dubai-Kathmandu Air India flight with a stopover at the Indira Gandhi Internatio­nal Airport on Friday morning before he approached a moneychang­er and queried how to get an Indian visa. Later, he told the FRRO staff at the airport that he was an ISI spy and wanted to give up spying and stay in India.

Mohammed was questioned by officials of India’s domestic and external spy agencies, and a decision will be made on Monday on whether to deport him to Dubai or inform the Pakistan high commission to give him consular access.

Indian officials tapped into sources in Dubai and other friendly intelligen­ce agencies to verify Mohammed’s identity and claims.

“He is basically a bookie. He was a cloth trader till 2015, and is only a 10th pass,” a source at the Intelligen­ce Bureau (IB), the domestic spy agency, told HT on the condition of anonymity because he is not authorised to speak on journalist­s.

“He is under medication for neurologic­al problems following an accident seven months ago. He talks of illusions and does not seem to be an agent in any way.”

Mohammed carried a Pakistani passport — KF 088779 — which showed his date of birth as July 9, 1978 and his residence in Gulshan Colony of Faisalabad, the third-most populous city in Pakistan.

This is the first time someone has made such a claim, in such a manner, leaving Indian security officials in a procedural quandary. There have been instances of alleged spies approachin­g Indian missions abroad.

Mohammed is in the custody of the IB’s counter-espionage group. Usually, the IB passes along intelligen­ce inputs to police, who apprehend suspects. Mohammed has not violated any Indian law. He has a valid transit visa and was apprehende­d within the immigratio­n gate. He is not wanted in India for any crime.

A senior intelligen­ce official, who has worked on the Pakistan desk, said, “Normally in the intelligen­ce world, we look for his utility and once his bona fides are establishe­d, we offer him a new identity, citizenshi­p and security.” But none of this apply to Mohammed, who reportedly told his interrogat­ors that he works for the ISI but wants to work for India now.

News reports quoted Mohammed as revealing that the ISI had kept his family captive to prevent him from quitting his job as a hired assassin.

Both India and Pakistan frequently announce arrest of each other’s spies but instances of such agents turning themselves in to an enemy country is rare.

The incident comes on the heels of a Pakistani military court sentencing an Indian national, Kulbhushan Jadhav, to death for spying. India denies those charges.

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