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The "Spy Pigeons" of Pakistan Discussion

Abdullah719

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Jammu&Kashmir: Locals in Kathua captured a pigeon near Indian border fences today. Shailendra Mishra, SSP Kathua says, "We don't know from where it came. Locals captured it near our fences. We have found a ring in its foot on which some numbers are written.Investigation underway" <a href="https://t.co/76RJilZTFO">pic.twitter.com/76RJilZTFO</a></p>— ANI (@ANI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ANI/status/1264840952394297344?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2020</a></blockquote>
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Another pigeon :murali
 
Somewhere in Pakistan, someone is trolling Indians :yk

Or ISI really do have pigeon squad :))

Oh, the paranoia! :facepalm:

PS: the cage of our captured soldier is pink!
 
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1. we can pass it on to australia to strike a deal for our next visit down under where they let us draw one test

2. we can use it in champions trophy to dismiss him.

also we need to give a medal of valor here. that is really important

Looks like our little agent came good :afridi
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A pigeon, suspected to be trained in Pakistan for spying, captured along the International Border (IB) in Kathua district of Jammu and Kashmir: officials.</p>— Press Trust of India (@PTI_News) <a href="https://twitter.com/PTI_News/status/1264865607335346183?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2020</a></blockquote>
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:salute
 
I sense "fowl" play. Jokes aside, Pakistan should arrest all their military pigeons as they might start a coo...
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Certainly not the first time we’ve heard such fowl language from the Indian media... <a href="https://t.co/hpFT8GTy6A">https://t.co/hpFT8GTy6A</a></p>— Michael Kugelman (@MichaelKugelman) <a href="https://twitter.com/MichaelKugelman/status/1264896395632422917?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 25, 2020</a></blockquote>
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:ghalib
 
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/sj6-LG5VpGk" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>.
 
Indian Border Security Forces (BSF) claimed on Monday to have captured another "Pakistani spy pigeon" and handed it over to police in Indian occupied Kashmir, NDTV reported.

The pigeon, "with a prominent pink patch and a tag on its leg", was logged at the police station as a "suspected Pakistani spy", said NDTV.

The report said that the pigeon is being suspected of being part of an "espionage attempt from Pakistan" and that an investigation has been launched into the matter.

According to the report, police records show that the pigeon flew into the house of a woman in Chadwal area, who caught it and handed it over to the BSF. The latter then handed it over to the police for further investigation.

Police quoted the woman as saying that the pigeon had a ring round its foot that had numbers inscribed on it.

This is not the first time a pigeon has been accused of spying on India for Pakistan. In 2015, a pigeon was captured by Indian forces for crossing the Indo-Pak border into India's Pathankot area.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1559466/i...re-of-another-spy-pigeon-from-pakistan-in-iok
 
EY3GuagXQAUMCYe.jpg
 
Indian Border Security Forces (BSF) claimed on Monday to have captured another "Pakistani spy pigeon" and handed it over to police in Indian occupied Kashmir, NDTV reported.

The pigeon, "with a prominent pink patch and a tag on its leg", was logged at the police station as a "suspected Pakistani spy", said NDTV.

The report said that the pigeon is being suspected of being part of an "espionage attempt from Pakistan" and that an investigation has been launched into the matter.

According to the report, police records show that the pigeon flew into the house of a woman in Chadwal area, who caught it and handed it over to the BSF. The latter then handed it over to the police for further investigation.

Police quoted the woman as saying that the pigeon had a ring round its foot that had numbers inscribed on it.

This is not the first time a pigeon has been accused of spying on India for Pakistan. In 2015, a pigeon was captured by Indian forces for crossing the Indo-Pak border into India's Pathankot area.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1559466/i...re-of-another-spy-pigeon-from-pakistan-in-iok

I think this pigeon deserves full access to consular advice and it's dietry requirements need to be met.
 
This is real sir-ji-kal strike :)))


Tum kitnay quwway marogaye har ghar se aek kabootar nikalyga :afridi
 
India and Pakistan try and outdo each other in many things but this - really!?
 
Owner rejects Indian claim of ‘spy’ pigeon’s capture

SIALKOT: After the Indian Border Security Force (BSF) claimed they had captured another “Pakistani spy pigeon”, a Pakistani villager refuted the allegation, saying he is the owner of the pigeon.

Habibullah, a resident of Bagga-Shakargarh village, situated along the Sialkot Working Boundary, said he was the owner of this pigeon recently “arrested” by India.

He said the second pigeon of the pair was with him. “Yes, this is my pet pigeon as it can never be a spy or a terrorist,” he said.

On Monday, Indian news outlets reported that a pigeon “with a prominent pink patch and a tag on its leg” was logged at a police station as a “suspected Pakistani spy”. The reports said the pigeon was suspected of being part of an “espionage attempt from Pakistan” and that an investigation has been launched into the matter.

According to the reports, police records showed the pigeon flew into the house of a woman in the Chadwal area, who caught it and handed it over to the BSF. The latter then handed it over to police for further investigation.

Police quoted the woman as saying the pigeon had a ring around its foot that had numbers inscribed on it.

However, Habibullah said he had a passion for pigeons and owned a dozen. He said that on Eid he flew several pigeons to celebrate the occasion in his village.

He said his village was about 4km from Indian territory, adding that he had fixed rings around the feet of his pigeons. The villager said he had specially gotten his mobile number inscribed on the rings.

He said the pigeon was an innocent pet bird and was a symbol of peace, love and tolerance.

Habibullah said displaying mental aggression, the Indians had declared his pigeon a Pakistani spy.

The villager urged Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to return the pigeon to Pakistan with “full protocol and due respect”. He said India should avoid such blame games and refrain from victimising innocent birds. He also urged the world to take notice of India’s “highhandedness”.

Meanwhile, residents of Bagga protested against the arrest of the pet and raised slogans against New Delhi.

This is not the first time a pigeon has been accused of spying on India for Pakistan. In 2015, a pigeon was captured by Indian forces for crossing over into India.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1559604/owner-rejects-indian-claim-of-spy-pigeons-capture
 
This is still better than the time India scrambled a SU-30 to shoot down a toy drone. Just getting the jet to the end of the runway would have cost more than the drone itself :)))
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PakistanArmy?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PakistanArmy</a> troops shot down an Indian spying <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/quadcopter?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#quadcopter</a> in Rakhchikri Sector along LOC. <br>The quadcopter had intruded 650 meters on Pakistan’s side of the <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/LOC?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#LOC</a>. <a href="https://t.co/ZARleWqaat">pic.twitter.com/ZARleWqaat</a></p>— DG ISPR (@OfficialDGISPR) <a href="https://twitter.com/OfficialDGISPR/status/1265640415954337792?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 27, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

No tea this time.
 
Habibullah, a resident of Bagga-Shakargarh village, situated along the Sialkot Working Boundary, said he was the owner of this pigeon recently “arrested” by India.


^Return the pigeon to this poor fella Habibullah. It's not his fault ISI captured his pet bird, radicalised it and let it loose on their neighbours.
 
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Pakistani man demands return of ‘spy’ pigeon detained in India

“All India has to do is add Pakistan dialling code before the so-called coded message attached with the pigeon and they can talk to me.”

This is 42-year-old Habibullah who is a resident of a village in Narowal, 4km from the Working Boundary between India and Pakistan in Sialkot sector. He claims that the “Pakistani spy” detained by Indian forces is his pet female pigeon.

Demanding an apology from the Indian government and Indian media, he said, “Neither anyone from India nor from Pakistan has contacted me over this spy row. If we can return Indian pilot, India can also return my pigeon with respect.”

According to Times of India, the pigeon was found by a woman resident of Kathua district.

It quoted Kathua Police senior superintendent Shailendra Kumar Mishra saying, “We don’t know from where it came. Locals captured it near our fences. We have found a ring in its foot on which some numbers are written. Further investigation is underway.”

Habibullah told The Independent the name of the detained pigeon of the year-old black and white female pigeon is Golden Madi. She has pink has been sprayed on her, he said. She has a bracelet around her foot on which his contact number is inscribed.

Habibullah is a resident of Bugga Village in Narowal. He said, “On Eid day, I let about 12 pigeons, including Golden Madi, fly. All pigeons returned except Golden Madi.” He added that later he came to news that his pigeon has been arrested by Indian forces.

“I have almost 250 pigeons and have been keeping pigeons for the last 30 years or so. I just want my Golden Madi back so that she can participate in pigeon competition due to take place on Thursday.”

Talking about the competition he said that the competition takes place twice a year and the winner is the one whose pigeon flies the longest time. “We have been training the pigeons for the last one month. I was so sure of winning this competition and prize money with Golden Madi flying.”

Habibullah said the pigeon’s breed has the ability to fly for 12 to 13 hours at a stretch.

Explaining the code attached to the bird’s foot that Indian officials are investigating, he said owners attach contact numbers to pigeons’ feet so that people could return them.

“Golden Madi also have a ring attached to her foot with my contact number inscribed on it. All Indian forces have to do is add dialling code 0092 before the number and they can ascertain that she is my pet and not a spy.”

This is not the first time that a pigeon has been labelled a “spy” and detained. In 2015, a pigeon was intercepted in Manwal village of India. The pigeon was stamped with “Tehsil Shakargarh, district Narowal”. Shakargarh is the same place where pigeon flying competition takes place twice a year and in which Habibullah also wanted Golden Madi to participate.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...eon-spy-arrested-narowal-border-a9535886.html
 
After pigeon, Pakistan sending locusts as spies.

Here's India's most watched news anchor with the story:

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Indian media blame Pakistan for dispatching “terrorist locusts” into the country after ‘spy pigeon’ story <a href="https://t.co/FFtcs1XSUc">pic.twitter.com/FFtcs1XSUc</a></p>— Baba Umar (@BabaUmarr) <a href="https://twitter.com/BabaUmarr/status/1266070699942260741?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 28, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is gold. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/FreeOurPigeon?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#FreeOurPigeon</a> &#55357;&#56834;&#55357;&#56834;<br><br> <a href="https://t.co/0gehveEfol">pic.twitter.com/0gehveEfol</a></p>— Rehman Azhar (@rehman_azhar) <a href="https://twitter.com/rehman_azhar/status/1266401448666988544?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 29, 2020</a></blockquote>
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:yk
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/HamaraKabotarWapisKro?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#HamaraKabotarWapisKro</a><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/IndianArmy?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#IndianArmy</a> deserves . They finely caught <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PakistanArmy?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PakistanArmy</a> major Kabotar . <a href="https://twitter.com/ashoswai?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@ashoswai</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/majorgauravarya?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@majorgauravarya</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/RajaFaisal01?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@RajaFaisal01</a> <a href="https://t.co/Ky5kntcrCs">pic.twitter.com/Ky5kntcrCs</a></p>— Bilal Sial (@Bilusial) <a href="https://twitter.com/Bilusial/status/1265334662706200577?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 26, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="hi" dir="ltr">Sadda kabutar wapas kita jaye. Kabutar nal vahut jyada pyar hai&#55357;&#56834;&#55357;&#56834;<br>India arrested his Kabutar from J&K &#55357;&#56834;&#55357;&#56834;<br> <a href="https://t.co/7GZwfVQ9Nm">pic.twitter.com/7GZwfVQ9Nm</a></p>— Ravi Nair (@t_d_h_nair) <a href="https://twitter.com/t_d_h_nair/status/1265845435026923520?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 28, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

A pigeon can not cross the border into India without getting noticed, yet militants are able to infiltrate India via LOC, the most heavily guarded Line.

Questions, questions, questions!
 
SRINAGAR, India (Reuters) - Indian police have released a pigeon belonging to a Pakistani fisherman after a probe found that the bird, which had flown across the contentious border between the nuclear-armed nations, was not a spy, two officials said on Friday.

“The pigeon was set free yesterday (May 28) after nothing suspicious was found,” said Shailendra Mishra, a senior police official in Indian-administered Kashmir. It was unclear where the bird was released and whether it flew back to its owner.

The Pakistani owner of the pigeon had urged India to return his bird, which Indian villagers turned over to police after discovering it.

“It’s just an innocent bird,” Habibullah, the owner of the bird, who goes by just one name, told Reuters on Friday.

He rejected allegations that the numbers inscribed on a ring on the pigeon’s leg were codes meant for militant groups operating in the disputed region of Kashmir.

Habibullah, who lives in a village near the Kashmir border, one of the most militarised zones in the world, said the bird had participated in a pigeon racing contest and the digits on the bird’s leg were his mobile phone number.

The sport is especially popular in the border villages, said Yasir Khalid of the Shakar Garh Pigeon Club, adding such races are held in India too, and it is not unusual to lose a bird on either side. Owners identify their birds with stamps on the wings, paint and rings on the feet.

“We had to take the bird into our custody to probe if it was being using for spying,” a senior Indian border security officer said requesting anonymity, while explaining this was part of the drill given border sensitivities.

In 2016, a pigeon was taken into Indian custody after it was found with a note threatening Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ns-alleged-bird-spy-to-pakistan-idUSKBN2352Y5
 
Death and 'spy' pigeons in Indian-administered Kashmir

In Kashmir, on either side of the Line of Control that separates Indian-administered and Pakistani-administered Kashmir, seldom is anything simple.

Even burying the dead has become political.

Indian authorities are refusing to hand over the bodies of those killed in ongoing fighting between the Indian army and Kashmiri rebel fighters to their families.

They have given the COVID-19 pandemic as the reason for not handing over the bodies.

"Whilst there is the threat of coronavirus, the bodies will not be handed over," the inspector general of police in Kashmir, Vijay Kumar, told Al Jazeera in early May.

That is causing emotional pain to the family of Hazim Shafi Bhat, a disabled teenager who was killed by Indian troops near his village in the Wangam area of Handwara in the north of Indian-administered Kashmir on May 4.

Indian authorities kept his body but allowed his parents to attend the funeral some 35km from their village. While the distance may not sound like much, when you have to navigate checkpoints, curfews and the daily security procedures of the area, also adding in the expense of travel, it becomes very difficult. Put simply, they cannot visit his grave like they would if he were buried in his local cemetery.

The authorities buried Bhat in an unmarked grave in a cemetery reserved for the bodies of unidentified rebel fighters. This, despite there being no evidence that he was a rebel fighter; even an Indian police statement refers to the 14-year-old as a civilian. According to his friends on social media, Bhat was physically disabled and suffered from a speech disorder.

Bhat's mother Meema Begum is upset about the situation. She tells Al Jazeera she fears other families will go through the same pain.

"If they had handed us the dead body, the family members, his father and his sisters, sometimes could visit his grave," she says. "In the future, such attacks will happen again but we demand that this practice shouldn't be repeated with other people."

But it is already happening. Since the Indian authorities began refusing to hand over bodies in April, local media has reported on at least eight families suffering similar ordeals. Given the remote nature of the area, security clampdowns and curfews, that figure is likely to be higher.

The Indian authorities are now routinely burying people away from their homes - sometimes without any funeral.

One rebel fighter known as Wakil Nabi Dar was buried in a government-designated graveyard in Sonamarg, some 120km from his family home in Pulwama, 25km from Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian-administered Kashmir. There was no family funeral for him under the new rules governing the handover of the body, and because he was a rebel fighter, his family was not allowed to go to the government graveyard. In contrast, fallen Indian soldiers who have died in the fighting are given full military honours and buried with their family members in attendance.

The authorities say they do not want the large gatherings that funerals attract, for fear of the spread of infection.

But human rights groups are sceptical.

"The main issue for the government is that they are very scared of the spectacle which these funerals create," says human rights activist and chair of the Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances, Khurram Parvez, who spoke to Al Jazeera from Srinagar.

"Thousands of people come out and mourn these dead militants and rally behind them. They don't want to show people of India and internationally that anything is happening in Kashmir, so ... they are taking an excuse of COVID to implement a policy which they otherwise would have not been able to do."

The 'spy' pigeon
But if death is subject to politics then perhaps it is not surprising that even the humble pigeon is not above suspicion.

On the May 25, a pigeon, perhaps unaware of the de facto border, entered the airspace of Indian-administered Kashmir from Pakistan, causing the Indian media to scream "Spy" because it had been marked with dye and had a ring attached to its legs - a common way for owners to identify their pigeons, and one used the world over. The pigeon was captured by residents who claim it was carrying a coded message.

As of the time of writing, the whereabouts of the pigeon remains unclear. However, a Pakistani villager claims ownership of the alleged feathered James Bond and has spoken to Pakistani newspaper Dawn, appealing to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to return the bird to him, saying it was a symbol of peace, not a spy.

Burials. Pigeons. It seems that everything in the disputed region is subject to spin and politicking.

But once the coronavirus pandemic is over, the Indian authorities will be faced with a choice, whether to continue to bury rebel fighters and others killed in government burial grounds or hand them over to their families as before.

Many Kashmiris under Indian administration are not hopeful there will be a reversal, given the Indian government's recent moves in the region. These moves included revoking the special status given to the area in the Indian constitution that guaranteed special rights, including the autonomy to make laws except on matters that concern foreign policy, defence and communications, and an ongoing curfew that began in August 2019.

Whether it is burials or pigeons or any number of other things, if it happens in Kashmir on either side of the Line of Control it is automatically political.

In an under-reported move on May 27, the Indian authorities extended the ban on 4G mobile internet in Kashmir until June 17. The authorities say it is to hinder the movements of rebel fighters who rely on the network.

But ordinary Kashmiris speaking to local media say all the ban does is hamper their efforts to control the coronavirus pandemic, the same pandemic the Indian government says is the reason they cannot hand over bodies to their families to bury.
https://www.aljazeera.com/blogs/asi...ian-administered-kashmir-200527141515512.html
 
Pigeons then locusts and god knows what is going to be next.

Given the world coverage this news is getting. I think it would be a good opportunity for national geographic or animal planet to visit Pakistan and make a documentary on spy wildlife. They should tap into this rare market of spy wildlife and show how pigeons and locusts are trained for afterlife.
 
After pigeons, India takes PIA balloon into custody in occupied Kashmir

amir2.jpg

In a bizarre turn of events, authorities in Indian-occupied Kashmir have seized a plane-shaped balloon bearing the name of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), Indian news agency ANI reported on Wednesday.

According to the report, the balloon featuring the name, logo and livery colours of the national flag-carrier was found in Sotra Chak village of Hiranagar sector on Tuesday evening.

The report said that it was initially spotted by locals in the village who informed the police. Authorities have seized the balloon, while the matter is under police investigation.

It wasn't immediately known where the balloon came from.

With ties between Pakistan and India at a particularly low point, objects and animals crossing over the border have been seized by Indian authorities in recent years, who view them with suspicion.

In 2015, a pigeon was captured by Indian forces for crossing the Indo-Pak border into India's Pathankot area.

Last year in May, Indian Border Security Forces (BSF) claimed to have captured another "Pakistani spy pigeon" and handed it over to police in occupied Kashmir. A Pakistani villager later said he was the owner of the pigeon and refuted the allegation of it being "a spy or a terrorist".

https://www.dawn.com/news/1611748/a...-pia-balloon-into-custody-in-occupied-kashmir
 
Suspicious pigeon captured near Pakistan border in J&K’s Akhnoor with blue, yellow rings tied to its legs

The Border Security Force (BSF) has caught a white coloured pigeon with a message on its leg near the international border (IB) in the Ahnoor sector of Jammu and Kashmir.

Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir: The Border Security Force (BSF) on Thursday said that a suspicious pigeon was captured near the Pakistan border in Jammu and Kashmir's Akhnoor sector with blue and yellow rings tied to its legs.

According to the BSP, the white colour Pigeon was caught on September 1 around 6:15 pm. The BSF men who captured the pigeon found out that a blue colour ring bearing No 0315-7827659 on the right leg and written "OK" on the left leg in yellow colour.

Further investigation is underway into the matter.

Earlier in May, the locals living close to the international border (IB) in the Kathua district captured a pigeon with a coded ring tagged to its foot. The pigeon, painted pink, was caught near the Manyari village.

Was there prisoner exchange or was it just allowed to fly, asks Omar Abdullah after 'spy pigeon' is released

“We don’t know where the bird has come from. Locals on our side captured it near our fence. We have found a ring tagged to it its foot on which some numbers are written,” Kathua SSP Shailendra Kumar Misra had said.

“The pigeon, suspected to be trained in Pakistan for spying, has a ring with alphabets and numbers written on it,” a police source said, adding, “though birds have no boundaries and many of them fly across international borders during migration, a coded ring tagged to the captured pigeon’s body is a cause for concern as migratory birds don’t have such rings.

https://www.timesnownews.com/india/article/suspicious-pigeon-captured-near-pakistan-border-in-jk-s-akhnoor-with-blue-yellow-rings-tied-to-its-legs/806978
 
using pigeons to deliver messages is a very old technique. Problem is the Indian officers end up giving press conferences on this and go to news outlets with this information that makes them look funny and ridiculous.

Pakistani probably intercepts many such animals but doesnt have to report to media as it makes you look very ridiculous.
 
using pigeons to deliver messages is a very old technique. Problem is the Indian officers end up giving press conferences on this and go to news outlets with this information that makes them look funny and ridiculous.

Pakistani probably intercepts many such animals but doesnt have to report to media as it makes you look very ridiculous.

Lols. I don't know what's funnier the fact that poor pigeons are getting arrested or your defense of the whole thing.

Ridiculous times.
 
Lols. I don't know what's funnier the fact that poor pigeons are getting arrested or your defense of the whole thing.

Ridiculous times.
This reflects your own understanding of things.

Pigeons are one of the worlds oldest tricks in getting a message delivered and its a well known fact if you have read history.

Infact they were even used during the world war to send messages. Infact, pablo escobar used it in his prison to communicate with his workers.

So dont know what you are lolllzing about here.

Pakistan and insia do indulge in sucb tactics to contacts the spies they have got in each country. Issue is they make it a headline and expect normal people to take it serious which is ridiculous.
 
These pigeons are being caught by locals and it shows how anxious and threatened they are by cross border infiltration.
It's foolish to disregard incidents like these. There could be a Havala transfer or exchange of arm transfer details, and in conflict regions should not take any chance.
 
Two persons were arrested on charges of spying for Pakistan in a village in border district of Rajouri in Jammu and Kashmir, officials said on Sunday.

A man working as a porter with the Army and his relative, both residents of Nowshera, were picked up by a joint team of the Army and police on a specific information late Saturday night, they said.

They said the duo is accused of taking videos of vital and sensitive security installations and sharing these with their handlers outside the country in lieu of money.

A case under relevant sections of law was registered and further investigation is going on, the officials added.

https://wap.business-standard.com/a...pakistan-in-j-k-s-rajouri-121121900406_1.html
 
Drones From Pak Border More Than Doubled In 2022: Border Security Force

New Delhi: The BSF has been "bombarded" by the onslaught of drone flights from across the Pakistan border on the western front, and instances of the aerial vehicles bringing drugs, arms and ammunition more than doubled in 2022, the force's Director General Pankaj Kumar Singh has said.

He said the force has recently established a state-of-the-art laboratory at a camp in Delhi to study drone forensics and the results have been very encouraging.

Security agencies could track the flight path and even address of criminals involved in this cross-border illegal activity that is rearing its head over the last few years, he said on Saturday.

"The BSF has been at the receiving end of the drone menace for quite some time... the versatility of the drone, which is very well known, has been posing problems to us with nefarious elements having found new uses of the drone due to its anonymity and quick flight at sufficient height bypassing the frontiers," he said.

The DG said this while briefing Union home secretary Ajay Kumar Bhalla, who was chairing an event to inaugurate the forensic lab through a webinar session.

Quantifying the enormity of the drone menace, the DG said while the BSF detected about 79 drone flights along the India-Pakistan international border in 2020, it increased to 109 last year and "more than doubled at 266 this year".

"The major culprit regions are Punjab which saw 215 flights this year... in Jammu, about 22 flights have been seen," Singh said.

"The problem is grave. We do not have a foolproof solution as of now. They (drones) have been bringing across narcotics, arms and ammunition, counterfeit currency and all kinds of things," he said.

The DG said initially the BSF grappled with the challenge of not knowing what to do and even when the drone fell they had "no clue" where was it coming from or going.

"We then started getting into the forensics part. We realised that these drones had chips similar to computation devices like computers and mobile phones. As digital forensics help in solving cyber crimes, we got answers here too," Singh said.

The BSF, tasked to guard over 3,000 km of the India-Pakistan International Border running across Gujarat, Rajasthan, Punjab and Jammu, first established a drone repair lab at Delhi in September last year and later enhanced it in October to analyse the forensics of the drones shot down or recovered by it, the Punjab Police and the Narcotics Control Bureau.

It spent about ₹ 50 lakh in creating this forensic lab and has deployed a chosen manpower of tech-savvy officers and personnel to run it.

"We found (after forensic analysis of drones) their flight paths, launching and landing points, timings, GPS (global positioning system) coordinates and even messages they have exchanged and we realised there was an information mine. If we could get into this, we could find suspect's addresses, locations and much more," Singh said.

He said the force developed "good coordination" with the Punjab Police over this issue which has also provided the BSF with 200 personnel to conduct "depth patrols" at the front to check drones and their droppings.

Citing a success story, where drone droppings happened in the Havelia area of Punjab in March, the DG said a joint investigation and action by the two security agencies led to the arrest of 8 people, six of whom were convicted for narcotics crime.

The DG said the force has now begun a new system of incentivising and giving cash rewards to its border teams who shoot down drones.

"Eleven drones have been shot down (by us) this year and we are giving very handsome incentives to teams that bring them down. There is a very good enthusiasm in these teams," he said.

The BSF chief said the force is now undertaking a two-pronged approach to check this menace.

"We are undertaking depth patrolling so that people cannot come to the border to pick drone droppings. We are digging deep into drone forensics to extract information about its senders and receivers," he said.

The problem is "so acute" and, "this we know by interrogation (of suspects and those apprehended) that wherever our drone teams are deployed... depth patrols are or anti-drone equipment is installed, the criminals go to other parts to undertake the illegal activity", the DG said.

NDTV
 
Why does India think a pigeon can be a spy?

Pigeon is an intelligent creature but I doubt it can be an effective spy for humans.
 
Well India do whatever you need to do to stop all these spy apples, pigeons and balloons. Idiots.
 
Man From Gujarat Arrested For Working For Pak's Spy Agency ISI: Report

The Gujarat Police on Tuesday apprehended a 33-year-old man from Surat on charges of spying and allegedly working for Pakistani intelligence agency ISI, official sources told Press Trust of India.

Deepak Kishor Bhai Salunkhe was arrested by crime branch sleuths from the diamond city, acting on inputs provided by the Military Intelligence from the Pune-based southern army command, they said.

The man, a resident of Bhuvneswari Nagar in Surat, used to run a shop, identified by the sources as Sai Fashions.

"The ISI agent is being handed over to the special operations group (SOG) of Gujarat Police for further proceedings," a source said, Press Trust of India reported.

The sources said Salunkhe was "operating as a financial module which was receiving/transferring money to serving officials as well as civilians (in India) in lieu of crucial information.

"He was in touch with two Pakistan-based handlers, Hamid and Kashif, and was in the process of compromising sensitive information with them," the source said.

NDTV
 
Pak Drone Carrying Drugs Shot Down, Falls On Other Side Of Border In Punjab

A Pakistan drone that reportedly dropped drugs into India along the International Border in Punjab was intercepted by BSF troops following which it fell on the other side, a senior officer said today.

The drone was "downed" by Border Security Force (BSF) troops around 7:20 pm on Tuesday and it has been taken away by the Pakistan Rangers, he said.

The incident took place near the Daoke border post in Amritsar.

The drone was seen lying 20 metres inside the Pakistan territory opposite Indian border post Bharopal when the area was searched on Wednesday morning.

The troops later recovered a packet containing 4.3 kgs of suspected heroin behind the border fence in Bharopal village, a BSF spokesperson said.

Officials said it is suspected that the drug packet was dropped by the drone.

"It (drone) hovered in the sky for a few minutes when counter-drone measures (firing) were taken and later it fell on the other side while returning," he said.

In an another narcotic recovery case from along the same border but not related to drone dropping, the BSF recovered 25 kgs of suspected heroin from a farming field in Fazilka district on Wednesday around 2 am.

The troops got alerted after some activity was noticed on both sides of the India-Pakistan border fence near Gatti Ajaib Singh village of the district.

"BSF troops fired towards Pakistani smugglers ahead of the border fence. However, smugglers managed to run away taking advantage of the dense fog.

"A total of 25 packets suspected to be heroin weighing approximately 25 kg, a PVC pipe and a shawl were recovered," the spokesperson said.

NDTV
 
Suspected Spy Pigeon With Devices Fitted On Leg Caught Off Odisha Coast
The pigeon was captured by the fishermen and handed over to the marine police in Odisha's Paradip.

A pigeon fitted with devices, which appear to be a camera and a microchip, was caught from a fishing boat off the Paradip coast of Odisha's Jagatsinghpur district, with the police suspecting that the bird was being used for spying.
Some fishermen found the pigeon perched on their trawler a few days ago. The bird was captured and handed over to the marine police in Paradip on Wednesday.

"Our veterinarians will examine the bird. We will seek help of the State Forensic Science Laboratory for examining the devices attached to its legs. It appears that the devices are a camera and a microchip," Jagatsinghpur Superintendent of Police Rahul PR told PTI.

It also seems like something has been scribbled on the wings of the bird in a language unknown to the local police.

"Experts' help will also be sought to find out what is written," the SP said.

Pitambar Behera, an employee of the fishing trawler 'Sarathi', said he saw the pigeon perched on the boat.

...
https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/sus...isha-coast-3845305#pfrom=home-ndtv_topstories
 
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