City
Epaper

Key accused in Pakistan-led espionage conspiracy case sentenced two imprisonments for 5.5 years

By ANI | Updated: January 28, 2026 13:15 IST

New Delhi [India], January 28 : A key accused in a Pakistan-led espionage conspiracy case was on Tuesday sentenced ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], January 28 : A key accused in a Pakistan-led espionage conspiracy case was on Tuesday sentenced to two simple imprisonments for 5.5 years for his involvement in fraudulent use of mobile SIM cards and misuse of social media platforms.

A National Investigation Agency (NIA) special court at Vishakhapatnam announced the judgement naming the accused, Altafhusen Ghanchibhai alias Shakil.

The accused has been sentenced to simple imprisonment for a period of 5 years and 6 months, with a fine of Rs 5,000, under Section 18 of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, and to simple imprisonment of 2.5 years, with a fine of Rs 5,000, under Section 66C of the Income Tax Act, 2000. The two sentences will run concurrently to a maximum term of 5.5 years.

NIA said in a statement that Shakil had pleaded guilty during the ongoing trial, during which 37 witnesses had already been examined by the prosecution.

"Convicting the accused for misusing unique identification features, including SIM cards and OTPs, as well as social media, the special court pronounced its orders against him," said the NIA.

The cross-border conspiracy case RC-03/2021/NIA/HYD involved use of Indian SIM cards belonging to fishermen arrested by the Pakistan Navy during fishing on the high seas. The mobile phones and SIM cards of these fishermen were seized by the Pak Navy and later activated by the accused in India to facilitate espionage activities.

The NIA further said its investigation into the conspiracy had conclusively established that the accused had inserted Indian SIM cards into his mobile handset and generated One-Time Passwords (OTPs), which he had shared with Pakistani Intelligence Operatives (PIOs), enabling the operation of Indian WhatsApp numbers from Pakistan.

"The compromised Indian numbers were subsequently used by the PIOs to contact Indian defence establishment personnel under fake identities, with the intent to elicit sensitive and restricted defence-related information, thereby threatening the unity, integrity, security, and sovereignty of India," said the anti-terror agency.

The NIA also added that it is continuing with its meticulous efforts to counter cyber-enabled and other cross-border terrorist and espionage activities, and bring all such offenders to book.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsPT Usha says Commonwealth Sport delegation "very happy" with Ahmedabad's for CWG 2030

International"India an important member of Pax Silica": US Under Secy Helberg pushes pro-innovation AI framework in meet with Misri

NationalNDRF retrieves capsized boat from Yamuna in Mathura; 10 dead, search for missing continues

NationalECI orders repoll in Assam's Karimganj North after post-poll scrutiny of records

International"Iran didn't start this war": Representative of Supreme Leader Abdul Majid Hakeem Ilahi

National Realted Stories

NationalJal Jeevan Mission scam: Retired IAS officer Subodh Agarwal produced before Court, gets 3-day police custody

National132 devotees from Ludhiana had come for 'darshan', says DM CP Singh on Mathura boat accident

NationalAI Summit protest case: Court grants interim protection to IYC member, directs him to join investigation

NationalTripura emerges fastest-growing economies in NE, attracts Rs 2,000 cr investment interest at Bengaluru conclave

NationalUGC secretary Manish Joshi to be relieved; Shyama Rath to take charge