National

Main Hoon Con! Indian Airports Are Stomping Grounds Of Epidemic Of Impostors

Indian airports see a surge of ingenious impostors travelling on forged documents to foreign shores

Main Hoon Con! Indian Airports Are Stomping Grounds Of Epidemic Of Impostors
info_icon

Women are said to love men in uniform; and both men and women바카라”not gullible layabouts, but professionals in the business of alertness바카라”are taken in by it. A crisp shirt with gleaming epaulettes, peaked cap perched on top, brass buttons of his jacket given a spit-and-polish바카라ŠRajan Mahbubani, resident of Delhi바카라™s Vasant Kunj, was a dead ringer for a Lufthansa pilot. His motive for the disguise? Ostensibly, to get privileged treatment at airports and in-flight services, but he seemed to have been goaded by a 바카라œlove for uniform바카라, a pen­­chant for make-believe and, one would imagine, an underfed ego.

Mahbubani was caught on November 18, when he tried to board an Air Asia flight from Delhi to Calcutta in his garb of choice. He admitted that he procured the fake I-card of Lufthansa from Thail­and. 바카라œWe are investigating his pictures on social networking sites, where he is posing inside the cockpit. It could be morphed, as entering the cockpit of an aircraft is not easy,바카라 says Sanjay Bha­tia, deputy commissioner, Delhi Police, at the Indira Gandhi Interna­tio­nal Airport.

Indeed, Indian airports are the stomping grounds of an epidemic of imposters sweeping India. Its biggest spur is the lure of the 바카라˜foreign바카라™ country, a land where geese lay golden eggs as a matter of course바카라”an obsession inexplicable for its being so persistently risky. Offences range from forgery of identification to inventive fancy dress, sometimes both.

The marquee case, if you like, was that of Jayesh Kumar Krushnakant Bhai Patel, 32, who posed as a wheelchair-­bound 81-year old-man, Amrik Singh, aiming to take off for the US on Septem­ber 9. For his disguise, he consulted mak­eup artist Shamsher Singh alias Billu Barber, who advised him to grow a beard and colour both hair and beard white. Add thick spectacles and a turban, and his deception was worthy of the world바카라™s best con men. Jayesh also procured a passport for 바카라˜Amrik Singh바카라™ and a US visa.

info_icon

Jayesh Patel, transformed into 81-year-old Amrik Singh.

On the day of his departure, Jayesh alias Amrik got into a wheelchair at IGI airport and coolly passed through immigration check. Then, at the time of security frisking, CISF personnel Rajveer Singh asked him to stand up.

Worthy of Sherlockian deduction, Singh noticed that Patel바카라™s skin was of a young man and that the hair on his hands was black. He also noticed the black roots of his beard and hair. Once confronted, Jayesh was handed over to the police. The securityman later confessed that his nearly-successful ruse was aimed at sec­uring a job in the US.

However, many like him have been able to cheat the stringent immigration process and reach their coveted destinations using forged passports and visas. 바카라œIn the past few years, 60 impostors have left for the US. This has come to light after probing those who were caught at the IGI airport,바카라 says Bhatia.

In an attempt slightly less audacious than Jayesh바카라™s, 68-year-old Gurdeep Singh from Moga (Punjab) went as 바카라˜Karnail Singh바카라™, 89, to get employment as a labourer in Hong Kong. Later, he rev­ealed that he had been visiting Hong Kong since 1995 on his original passport but was driven to this when he rep­eatedly failed to get a Hong Kong Permanent Resident Card. Yet Gurdeep was an astute impersonator바카라”he hoodwinked airport officials and security and managed to go to Hong Kong in 2008, fin­ally getting a card for 바카라˜Karnail Singh바카라™. Several more trips, too, passed without incident. On September 12, he arrived for one more visit. During immigration clearance, his youthful appearance (com­pared to his declared age) aroused the suspicion of airport staff. A masterful masquerade met its end.

Besides such instances of glaring dec­eit, airport officials often come across cases where passengers use their photographs on someone else바카라™s passport; a deg­ree of facial resemblance helps too.  Like Jagdeep Kaur, 38, who dreamt of remarrying and settling in Canada and fraudulently obtained a passport from Jaipur in the name of Deep Kaur Brar, 32. Her trickery succeeded in 2007 and she travelled to Canada. But luck ran out this year, when she was charged for illegal residence and was deported.

Seeking asylum and refugee status in European countries like France and Germany also drive people to fudge travel documents. That바카라™s what two Afghan nationals residing in India for the past 40 years tried to do. Armita Kaur and Amrita Kaur, who moved to India during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, were helped by one Rajesh Sharma to get Indian passports made in the names of Savitri and Rekha Sharma. That done, they got travel visas to Italy and, en route to France, reached Denmark, where they were caught travelling on invalid documents and dep­orted in October.

In another case of twisted shamming, two passengers바카라”a male and a female바카라”posed as a couple and got past immigration and security clearance for Thailand from IGI this October. But Nirvair Singh from Kapurthala (Punjab) and Roshniben Chaudhari from Gandhi Nagar (Gujarat) had something else up their sleeve. They actually wanted to go to Canada. So, they didn바카라™t take the flight to Thailand, instead boarding a China Southern Airlines flight using other passports and boarding passes issued in other names. Their game was up when they tried to board the connecting flight at the airport in China.         

Much to the surprise of immigration officials, departure details of Indians dep­orted due to invalid visas or incomplete documents are found to be missing in the system here. 바카라œThis indicates that such people impersonate and travel on others바카라™ passport while carrying their own valid passport as well. They get fake visas on a fake passport and cheat immigration officials and airline staff,바카라 says an immigration official.  바카라œHowever,바카라 he adds, 바카라œonce they reach their destination, they are caught and sent back. They destroy fake passports on the way back to India. After arriving home as deportees, they show their valid passports as proof of legal travel. But absence of departure records from valid passports exposes their lies.바카라  

However, admittedly, many who app­ear to be daring confidence men (and women) are really misled, pressured and groomed by touts and agents dangling a foreign dream before their desperate eyes. Almost all complain of extortion.             

Yet, for all the bust-ups, instances of posturing as someone else are on a steady roll: out of 525 cases of offences lodged at IGIA police station in 2019 till date, about 20 per cent fall under its various guises.  Keeping in mind the 86 imm­igration checkposts in India catering to international traffic, an overall count of the offence could be substantial. Seemingly endless ingenuity by offenders, too, is a force to reckon with.

The government is also trying to strengthen the immigration system by introducing programmes like Mission Mode Project on Immigration, Visa Foreigners바카라™ Registration and Tracking (IVFRT). Under this, all Indian missions, immigration checkposts and Foreigners Regional Registration Offices are being computerised to develop a secure and integrated framework.

The law against impersonation, though stringent (a non-bailable, non-compoundable offence that can fetch a maximum 10 years바카라™ imprisonment), has failed to act as a deterrent.  The underground art of boundary-hopping confidence tricksters is a rampaging malady.

×