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RAW officer in PMO was B'desh mole for 5 years

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!@#$%%^ My first post Was wrong, I thought Indian spy in bangladesh.

GOI should send MAN HUNTERS IN BANGLADESH!!!!
 
Do mk up ur mind before you post!

You nailed it.

Some how the RAW has to be labelled incompetent and yet the old stories of Indian arrogance and evil kaffir designs have to be kept intact. Not possible. We can either be smart and cunning or stupid. Not both. :-)
 
RAw is accused of everything that happens from Washington to Indonesia and it couldnt find a mole in PMO...lol
 
RAW runs for cover

Josy Joseph

DNA India - June 13, 2007

NEW DELHI: Had it not been his cantankerous wife, Dewanchand Malik, a spy, might still have been taking the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) for a ride.

Frustrated by a messy divorce and her husband's failure to turn up on a couple of dates at the court, Malik's wife shot off a letter to the agency's Aviation Research Centre agency in 2005 stating that Malik was a Bangladeshi national.

This not only exposed the case of a foreigner sneaking into a senior intelligence job, but also the threat he poses considering his knowledge of the country's vital scientific system.

Malik had managed to join the Aviation Research Centre of India's external intelligence by forging documents and claiming to be an Indian citizen.

According to Intelligence sources, they realised that Malik faked his citizenship only after his wife alerted them. "She wrote to us," confirmed an officer.

An intelligence official told DNA that Malik probably had an illicit affair that prompted his wife to move court.

According to sources, Malik had gone on leave immediately after his wife moved the courts for divorce in early 2005. But he disappeared as soon as his wife's letter forced RAW into launching a hunt for him sometime in April-May.

Over the past couple of years, the Intelligence Bureau and RAW have been hunting for Malik at all possible locations. "A few months back, we almost nabbed him at his 24-Parganas district residence, but he got wind of us in the last moment," IB sources said.

At every date of his divorce case, Raw officials land up at the court, waiting to nab him. "He hasn't turned up at the court ever since May 2005," sources said. However, Malik had once managed to get a stay from High Court on the divorce proceedings much after May 2005.

The RAW carried out extensive investigation on Malik in Bangladesh and collected conclusive evidence of his citizenship.

"His father is no more, but the rest of his kin are in Bangladesh," sources added. Malik, however, had spent several years in West Bengal and had studied mostly in Kolkata.

According to RAW sources, the government has never taken up Malik's case with the Bangladesh government officially.

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1102916

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B'desh mole: RAW overhauls security

Josy Joseph

DNA India - June 13, 2007 10:44 IST

NEW DELHI: Shaken by the espionage row involving an assistant director of the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), who doubled up as an undercover Bangladeshi spy, the Centre has overhauled the the system to vet employees being recruited to intelligence agency.

Sources told DNA that the new system was recommended by a high-level committee, led by national security advisor M K Narayanan, and set up following the disappearance of Dewanchand Malik, an assistant director in the Aviation Research Centre of the RAW, around May 2005. Malik, who has been declared an absconder, would have gone on to become the deputy director, said the sources.

A Bangladeshi Hindu, Malik had provided a fake Indian citizenship certificate before joining the ARC as a member of its Imagery Analysis Cadre and was working as assistant director. He was there between 1996 and 2005, when he disappeared after his wife alerted the intelligence agency about his Bangladeshi origin. Malik and his wife are fighting a divorce battle in a Delhi court, and he hasn't attended a single hearing for long.

The three-member committee, which included Dr R Chidambaram, principal scientific advisor to the Prime Minister, and the then RAW chief Hormis Tharakan, had recommended a complete revamp of the security clearance system "which is now being implemented" by the RAW.Since its inception, RAW had a two-layer security clearance system.

First, the selected candidate was required to provide a proof of citizenship and non-criminal background. The second stage involved a comprehensive security clearance from the district magistrate, and the Intelligence Bureau (IB). The IB primarily conducted an index check against its list of people under suspicion.

Following the panel's suggestion, a third layer has now been added. All Class I and Class II officers joining the RAW now need the agency's mandate too. Besides, RAW will also have to carry out security clearance for all appointments to sensitive posts, in
keeping with the committee's recommendation.

Malik has come on board with a certificate of Indian citizenship from a deputy director of the agricultural department in the West Bengal government. The sources said the official is now facing disciplinary action.

The Imagery Analysis Cadre analyses images and intercepts gathered by ARC's secret planes, helicopters and satellites. "It is an extremely sensitive job," said a senior intelligence officer.

ARC operates several secret planes and helicopters from at least five bases—Delhi, Chakrata near Dehra Dun, Dum Duma near Tinsukia, Charbatia near Cuttack and possibly from Farkhor in Tajikistan. The sources insisted Malik had not stolen any document, but they admitted he had "extremely valuable" information.

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1102936&pageid=2

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"Our intelligence system is porous"

TIMESNOW.tv - June 13, 2007

Former senior RAW official B B Nandi alleges that intelligence agencies cannot look beyond foreign visits.

Hours after TIMES NOW broadcast an exclusive report on how a Bangladeshi spy had breached India's Cabinet Secretariat, now there are damning revelations against India's top intelligence agencies. A former senior Research and Analysis Wing or RAW official B B Nandi
says intelligence agencies cannot look beyond foreign visits.

"Free foreign trips are a lure"

"One reason is the craze for foreign visits," points out Nandi adding that this gives an opportunity for one and all to go to foreign countries, to spend some time. "This is one reason why we are so addict to the liaisons. I have also liaised, but I have found that really nothing is achieved expect by way of exposing our people to the overtures of other intelligence agencies."

"There's lack of political will"

In the past couple of years, some senior RAW officials have stabbed the intelligence agencies in the back. Nandi feels the main reason for this rot is the lack of political will.

"Unless at the political level there is a hard task master there is accountability and one thing I have been demanding is let the intelligence agencies security agencies report to the Parliament," says Nandi.

PMO security breached

Nandi was reacting to TIMES NOW report on how a Bangladeshi spy had targetted the Prime Minister's Office.

Dhimanchand Malik, alias DC, infiltrated into the PMO's Cabinet Secretariat as deputy director of RAW between 1999 and May 2005. FIR filed against Malik claimed he leaked confidential security information and stole some sensitive documents. Malik handled the Intelligence unit portfolio in the Cabinet Secretariat with over 200 field officers directly reporting to him Malik fled after the Counter Intelligence Unit of Cabinet Secretariat questioned his past in 2005. As soon as the breach was revealed, a team left for 24 Parganas in West Bengal to verify the residential address given by Malik. However, locals told the team that Malik was, in fact, a Bangladesh citizen. Later probes proved Malik had fled the country and it's believed he is currently in Bangladesh.

This is not the first time an espionage ring has been busted, but the fact that RAW took so long to detect a breach at a such high level has dented the credibility of India's top intelligence agency.

http://www.timesnow.tv/articleshow/2118659.cms
 
If its true

Then a good intelligence coup for Bangladesh and very embarrasing for PMO or RAW ! What are their secret services of Bangladesh called ?

If not

Then poor Mr Malik is at the bottom of the Indian Ocean after he had a mysterious heart attack while undergoing a friendly interview with RAW and the police complaint was made to cover-up the missing person report which could be filed by a relative later in say a court and the Court may order a police inquiry! I don't think the Bangladesh Govt will protest if one of their Indian spy goes missing.

In UK the MI5 and MI6 donot file any charges on investigations they carry out but later in the official police complaint which is a public document it will simply mention " In a joint investigation by Met police and MI 5 it was determined " - which basically means that the Met Police was included later so that courts would consider the operation, arrest, and evidence collected as legal.

Regards
 
Who is trying to destabilise whom now. RAW is such an inept organisation atleast now you shud stop giving undue credit to them.
 
The stories on this have suddenly dried up.

Was this all a charade by RAW or is it really screwed?

If this is all true, however, we should not underestimate it strengths based on a few slip ups. The CIA has suffered even worse intelligence breaches but is still surviving. The strength in RAW has less to do with sophistication but more to do with sheer money power and numbers. No other intelligence agency in South Asia can compete and to say that RAW is completely ineffective is disinformation. The only difference today is that bigger agencies are now operating and active in the region and can out pay RAW and out gun it and so it has to face increased competition from outside but it is building up alliances with like minded organizations and still retains influence and power.
 
Money power and numbers...is that all what external agencies are suppose to be.
 
Money power and numbers is the only tools available to RAW in South Asia as they cannot rely on ideological sympathizers in their target countries so they attract opportunists in large numbers using the power of money. From seeing RAW analysis I am not impressed by their sophistication but they are certainly ruthless in their objectives but they suffer from the overall limitations suggested above hence the apparent mess they find themselves in now. There has been some analysis on the new crisis that the whole thing is a show to do some internal house cleaning and the fiction of a Bangladeshi mole was the only way to achieve this. Such an explanation would account for the lack of interest in the story by the Indian establishment press and media which has completely ignored the news and there is no coverage in the international networks. Why the silence by the Indian press on such a sensational story?

But anyway have a look at the following well hidden story that appeared after a long while -


RAW truths

DNA India - June 13, 2007

It was an angry wife seeking divorce that exposed the foreign origins of Dewanchand Malik in India's premier external intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW). It certainly makes for a curious Sherlock Holmes story but for the fact that it has serious and dangerous implications.

While it may not be a case of a foreign spy worming his way into the heart of the Indian intelligence system, it still reflects poorly on the agency's ability to spot fakes within its set-up. The fact that a Bangladesh-born Malik could enter RAW at a fairly responsible level — and stay there for years — exposes the fact that the intelligence agency is quite lax in checking the antecedents of its employees. It is only after the Malik exposure that RAW has added a further layer of security clearance.

What comes out of this story is also the over-reliance on affidavits signed by government employees which can be used to establish identity. Such attestations help in getting everything from ration cards to passports and, as seen in this case, jobs in secret agencies. What is required is independent and rigorous verification of the candidate's claims; this is where RAW did not come up to scratch.

The agency, once well-regarded, seems to be getting hit by scandals. Senior officers have been found to be double agents and in recent times, controversies over top level appointments have riven the agency. Though it is a secretive organisation and the efficacy of its 'product' remains unknown to laypersons, scandals like these will affect its reputation. The manner in which the Malik case was handled also raises questions. The response to Malik's wife's letter should not have been a manhunt for the absconder. Instead, he should have been assured that the domestic storm would not affect his job.

Efforts should have been made to retain him with the agency before he was gradually marginalised. Instead, the old police practice of chasing a wrongdoer was set in motion. A tighter security clearance for future recruitments is the needed prescription. But there is also the need for a lateral approach to the problem of recruitment; international agencies now are going in for direct advertising of jobs, though the eventual selection remains a well-guarded secret.

Though the word put out is that there is no evidence about Malik disappearing with any secrets, an international agency would be happy to get hold of him. The secrets of the nation could,
therefore, be compromised. RAW needs to clean up its stables and ensure that it doesn't get hit by any more revelations of incompetency.

http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1103158
 
Money power and numbers is the only tools available to RAW in South Asia as they cannot rely on ideological sympathizers in their target countries so they attract opportunists in large numbers using the power of money. From seeing RAW analysis I am not impressed by their sophistication but they are certainly ruthless in their objectives but they suffer from the overall limitations suggested above hence the apparent mess they find themselves in now.

All agencies work in the same formula. ideology + money + safety...
 
RAW suffers due to some particular weaknesses and is over reliant on money power and numbers. Other intelligence agencies use other means at their disposal and the most successful have an ideological commitment from newly acquired assets which RAW cannot rely on so they tend to be dependent on opportunists who have no loyalty and can be bought by other well financed agencies. These recent allegations of a Bangladesh mole appears to be a completely made up story so that RAW can clean house. If true it shows equally the deficiencies that RAW is suffering from.
 
In Sri Lanka - 'Tamil identity. In Tibet the 'Tibetian' identity. In 1971 - the lingual and ethnic characterstics.

Good we dont use religion. We dont want it to come back and bite us as it does in various regions.
 
@ I donnot think this Malik was a Bangladeshi spy enrolled in RAW. May be he is from Bangladesh ! But it hardly matters. There are million like Malik from Bangladesh staying in India. Does it mean they are all Bangladeshi supporters. The West Bengal PM was also belongs to the than East Pakistani !! Parvez Musharraf was also born and brought up in India. Does it mean he worked for Bnagladesh or India.
 
How did this thread make a reappearance after so many years? LOLz .........
 
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