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Nisha
@NishaRpd
🙏जय🦚 श्री कृष्णा🙏🪷 🙏🏼हर हर 🔱महादेव 🙏🏼🪷 🫡ಜೈ🇮🇳ಹಿಂದ್🫡🪷 😌Lokah samastah sukhino bhavantu(लोकः समस्ताः सुखिनो भवन्तु) 😍🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🌿🌱🌴🌍🌞🌛💫🪐
🚩📍Bharath🌍🚩 Katılım Ekim 2021
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बिना किसी तैयारी के प्रधानमंत्री जी जिस तरह से देश के किसी भी हिस्से में रोड शो अगर कर दें तो इतनी जनता उनको देखने सुनने आ जाती है जितना किसी नेता की रैली में नहीं होती
साफ़ है - क्षेत्र राज्य भाषा किसी भी सीमा से ऊपर हैं प्रधानमंत्री जी के प्रति जनता में प्रेम
ऐसे ही इतने राज्य और केंद्र में सरकार नहीं बन जाती बिना जनता के प्यार के ❤️
हिन्दी
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Remembering India's Black Tiger - the Real Life Dhurandhar
April 11 is the birth anniversary of Ravindra Kaushik. Codenamed "The Black Tiger" by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, he was one of India's most legendary undercover spies for the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW). He successfully infiltrated the Pakistan Army, rose to the rank of Major (in the Military Accounts Department), and passed critical military intelligence back to India for several years before his cover was blown.
Early Life and Recruitment
Born in Sri Ganganagar, Rajasthan, to a family with military connections (his father J.M. Kaushik served in the Indian Air Force), Kaushik showed early talent in theatre and public speaking. This skill in performance and disguise caught the attention of RAW recruiters around 1973, when he was in his early 20s. He told his family he was taking a job in Delhi, but he was actually selected for deep-cover espionage training.
RAW wiped his Indian records, gave him the identity of Nabi Ahmed Shakir, and subjected him to rigorous preparation: learning Urdu, Pakistani customs, geography, and culture; undergoing circumcision for authenticity; and mastering infiltration techniques. After about two years of training, in 1975 (at age 23), he crossed into Pakistan.
Life Undercover in Pakistan
Once in Pakistan, Kaushik enrolled at Karachi University and earned an LLB degree to build credibility. He then joined the Pakistan Army as a civilian clerk in the Military Accounts Department. Through diligence and his cultivated persona, he rose in rank and was reportedly promoted to Major.
To deepen his cover and maintain the appearance of a loyal Pakistani, he married a local woman named Amanat (also referred to as Amaanat or Amanat Bano, daughter of a tailor associated with an army unit) around 1976. They had a son. He lived a complete double life, blending seamlessly while gathering intelligence on Pakistani troop movements, deployments, and sensitive sites like the Kahuta nuclear facility.
From roughly 1979 to 1983, Kaushik transmitted valuable information to RAW. His reports are credited with providing India strategic advantages and reportedly helping save thousands of Indian soldiers' lives during a period of heightened Indo-Pak tensions. He operated with extreme caution, living entirely as Nabi Ahmed Shakir.
How He Was Caught
In September 1983, RAW attempted to re-establish contact by sending another low-level operative, Inayat Masih, across the border. Masih was captured by the ISI. Under severe torture, Masih revealed Kaushik's true identity and role.
ISI set a trap: they allowed Masih to arrange a meeting with Kaushik. Unaware of the betrayal, Kaushik walked into the ambush and was arrested.
Arrest, Torture, and Imprisonment
Kaushik endured brutal torture for nearly two years at an interrogation centre in Sialkot. Pakistani authorities were shocked to discover a deep-cover Indian agent had risen so high in their military system. In 1985, a military court sentenced him to death for espionage.
He spent the next 16+ years in harsh conditions across multiple prisons, including Sialkot, Kot Lakhpat (Lahore), and finally Central Jail in Mianwali (some accounts mention Multan as well). Conditions were severe: prolonged isolation, physical abuse, and inadequate medical care. He contracted pulmonary tuberculosis, asthma, and heart disease, which worsened over time.
His Pakistani wife Amanat and family faced their own hardships after his exposure.
Death and Legacy
On 21 November 2001 (aged 49), Ravindra Kaushik died in Mianwali Central Jail from complications of tuberculosis and heart disease, exacerbated by years of neglect and imprisonment. His body was buried in an unmarked grave. No high-profile Indian intervention or prisoner swap succeeded in bringing him home.
Kaushik is remembered as one of India's greatest spies — a real-life embodiment of deep undercover sacrifice, often compared to fictional characters like "Dhurandhar."

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Yep. For 60+ years when they did the limitation, it was not.
News Algebra@NewsAlgebraIND
SONIA GANDHI : Delimitation is extremely dangerous.
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