
The Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi isn’t just a diplomatic outpost—it’s allegedly a covert base for Pakistan’s notorious spy agency, the ISI. Indian intelligence sources say the High Commission’s visa office is being used as a tool to scout, assess, and recruit vulnerable Indian citizens into espionage activities.
Let’s call it what it is: a front operation, hidden in plain sight.

Officials posing as visa processors delay applications, ask for extra documents—and in some cases, even SIM cards registered in the applicant’s name. These small acts aren’t just annoying—they’re deliberate. They’re how spies are made.
Once someone gives in—say, hands over that SIM card—they’re in. A simple favor becomes a slippery slope: take a photo of a cantonment, record troop movement, send your GPS coordinates. It starts slow but turns sinister fast.
The network is deeper than you think
According to Times of India, ISI agents are embedded in departments that interact with the public: visa, grievance redressal, and more. They’re trained to spot weaknesses—poverty, resentment, desperation—and exploit them.
Take Jyoti Malhotra, a YouTuber from Haryana. Arrested recently for filming sensitive areas and passing that footage to Pakistani handlers. Her case isn’t unique—it’s part of a larger web of targeted espionage, reaching into states like Uttar Pradesh where the ISI seeks to recruit disillusioned youth.
Mohammad Tarif from Nuh district was also arrested. His crime? Allegedly giving a SIM card to someone inside the High Commission and traveling to Pakistan. That’s all it takes.
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They’re recruiting under diplomatic cover
Pakistani intelligence officers use diplomatic immunity as a shield. You can’t just arrest them. You can’t always track them. That’s how the ISI builds and protects its network. And to avoid detection, they route communications through handlers in places like Dubai and Nepal.
It’s espionage—disguised in bureaucracy, protected by international law, and aimed squarely at India’s security.
And here’s the bitter irony—India, a rising global power, hosts this ticking time bomb in its own capital. We play fair on the global stage. Pakistan sends spies with visa stamps.
The West loves to preach about global cooperation and open borders. But let’s face it—if the roles were reversed, no one in Washington or Paris would tolerate this kind of foreign subversion on their turf.
It’s high time we called this what it is: an enemy operation under the cloak of diplomacy. The Pakistan High Commission should be under constant scrutiny, if not completely restructured or shut down. Our security isn’t just about guarding borders. It’s about guarding minds, phones, and blind trust.
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