A former senior official of India’s main intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), has admitted that Sarabjit Singh was sent to Pakistan for espionage, India media reported on Monday.
“Sarabjit was an Indian spy in Pakistan,” said the intelligence official who later became head of the agency said. “He managed to accomplish the task given to him but was caught while trying to flee.”
The former intelligence official, who handled Singh’s case, said the operation conducted by him didn’t involve a specific tactical purpose but was just one among many such operations that were conducted in Pakistan by Indian intelligence in the early and mid 90s.
“Some of the operations executed by RAW during the period were totally mindless,” the official said. “Spies like Sarabjit and their family have paid huge cost for it. Sometimes, the agency officials executed operations out of personal bravado that they can get ‘something’ done in Pakistan.”
Sources said that the process through which spies like Singh are dealt with was one that was evolving, which included issues such as how they were paid, as well as instances of if they were caught in enemy territory.
“Payments vary case to case depending on the nature of operation,” the official said. “There is no uniformity in discreet payments to families when such agents are caught or eliminated by the enemy.”
“Sarabjit had been awarded a state funeral because his case was mainly highlighted due to efforts of his politically astute sister Dalbir Kaur,” the official said. “His family is also being compensated, but there are many cases in which the spies came back from Pakistan knocked the doors of courts to get their dues.”