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Pakistan’s spy agency Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) for one and a half years used a SIM card sold in Delhi to contact its moles in India, police sources said.
The ISI used the prepaid telephone SIM card from near the Attari-Wagah border to be in touch with its moles in Jammu and Kashmir, where three men have been arrested for getting calls and WhatsApp messages from that number.
The SIM card was issued in the name of a woman from Laxmi Nagar in east Delhi. No such woman ever lived or lives at the Laxmi Nagar address.
The Crime Branch of Delhi Police made the discovery after busting a pan-India ISI-backed espionage racket towards the end of November 2015.
An officer of the Crime Branch, which busted the ISI espionage racket by arresting Kafaitullah Khan from the New Delhi Railway Station on November 26, said the SIM card belonged to a leading cellular service provider.
Another officer told IANS that “it was a prepaid number and was being used to send messages through WhatsApp.”
“The SIM number was actively used near the Attari border through Indian towers without paying international roaming charges,” he added.
Delhi Police arrested six suspected ISI moles in November-December 2015.
The six included a serving leading aircraftsman Ranjith KK, library assistant Kafaitullah Khan, Border Security Force head constable Abdul Rasheed, retired army havildar Munawwar Ahmad Mir, rifleman Farid Khan of the Jammu and Kashmir Light Infantry, and a government teacher, Sabar.
The officer said Kafaitullah Khan, Mir and Sabar were in touch with their ISI handler, identified as Faizal, who was using the number.
On December 30, police arrested Ankush Khandelwal from Delhi for issuing several SIM cards on the strength of fake identity cards. A total of 205 pre-activated SIM cards were recovered from Khandelwal.
A 33-year-old man from Shakurpur in west Delhi, Mohit Gupta, was arrested for his involvement in creating fake identity cards for those without any residence proof.
Several fake identity cards and blank customer acquisition forms (CAFs) were recovered from Mohit and his personal laptop had more than 1,000 such fake cards and equal number of photographs of different persons in a folder, the officer said.
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