Villagers along India-China border receive ‘spies’ calls
BY MPOST BUREAU17 May 2016 5:03 AM IST
MPOST BUREAU17 May 2016 5:03 AM IST
The caller, posing himself as either a colonel or a local official, made queries about the army presence in the area and the timings of their movement, official sources said.
Recently the ‘sarpanch’ (village head) of Durbuk village, located at an altitude of 13,500 feet above sea level between Chang La and Tsangte village, received a call in which the caller asked whether “outstanding” issues with the army had been sorted.
The sarpanch, who was sitting inside an army camp at the time of receiving the call, got suspicious and enquired from the caller about his identity.
Despite the caller identifying himself to be from Deputy Commissioner’s office, the sarpanch identified as Stanzin snubbed him and said he should get in touch with the army.
He also inquired from the local DC’s office only to find that no one from that number had called. The number was shared with the army which found that the number appearing on the sarpanch’s phone had been masked and it was a computer generated call.
Stanzin said he received the call only once. “The caller was asking about the movement of troops and whether the roads had been built in the area for their movement.
“He claimed that he was from the army headquarters but with his stupid queries, I did get suspicious and informed the army officer standing next to me,” he said.
Later, the army found that several people in villages along the Sino-Indian border had been receiving calls from such unknown numbers and in a few cases basic information had been shared out of “pure ignorance” by the villagers.
The army took the help of the state administration and a mass campaign has been launched to educate people in general and those living along the Sino-Indian border not to share any information with any unidentified caller.
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