‘Madam N’ and Influencer Spy: How Pakistani Businesswoman created a sleeper cell network in India; ISI-supported detective ring under lens | Bharat News

As India falls on a suspected Pakistan-supported espionage ring spread across the country, an unstable question emerges: how did Indian influential work against their country?At the center of this mystery, a Pakistani businessman with a high-level connection and a simple travel agency, Jayayana Travel and Tourism is a Pakistani businessman Noshaba Shahzad. But behind the tourist brochure, Shehzad allegedly helped to orchestrate a refined detective network with the support of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).According to sources quoted by NDTV, Shahzad is not just a travel agent, it is “Madame N”, an ISI codename for a woman who allegedly had groundwork for a sleeper cell network inside India, which aimed to recruit 500 operators, which could mix over the population.His strategy? Start with the affected. The arrested Instagram personality Jyoti Malhotra was allegedly among many Indian citizens, Shehzad lured in Pakistan on the pretext of cultural visits and tourism.But what started in the form of directed visits soon turned into ground work for espionage.Sources say that Shahzad worked hand in hand with Pakistani officials and ISI handlers, even manipulated the visa process through the Pakistani Embassy in Delhi. With just one call to prominent officials like Suhail Qamar (First Secretary, Visa) and Omar Sherir (Consolle, Trade), Shahzad could allegedly approve the Pakistani visa for those who had prepared hands for those who had prepared him by hand.She was in close contact with Danish aka Ehsan-ur-Remon, a known ISI operative, until she was expelled in May-which was not even after the arrest of Malhotra. In particular, Madam N’s husband is called a retired officer of Pakistan’s civil services, which adds another layer to her internal formula.Although there is no official tourism corridor between India and Pakistan, Shahzad allegedly managed to send more than 3,000 Indian nationals and 1,500 NRIs across the border in just six months. Many of these trips were organized under the banner of religious pilgrimage, Sikh and Hindu Yatras only allowed through their agency, thanks to a tie-up with the Evaiki Trust Property Board of Pakistan.Investigators believe that the agency was used not only for traveling, but also for funnel funds in anti -India propaganda efforts. The pilgrims were reportedly overcharged, in which additional diverts were diverted for secret operations.Shahzad’s network did not stop on Pakistan’s border. He said that travel agents were recruited in Delhi and other Indian cities, making a domestic pipeline to push Indian citizens into their espionage web.