Yes, I was an Indian spy in Pak: Kashmir Singh
Yes, I was an Indian spy in Pak: Kashmir Singh
Kashmir Singh says he was known as 'Ibrahim' in Pakistani prisons.

Chandigarh: Kashmir Singh, who was freed from Pakistani jail after 35 years, on Friday, has admitted that he was indeed an Indian spy and did his best to serve the country. He, however, deplored that successive governments at the Centre did nothing for his family.

"After my arrest in 1974, the successive governments did nothing for my family. I did the duty assigned to me as a spy... but the government after my arrest did not bother to spend a single penny for my family," a calm-and-composed-looking Singh, who was accompanied by his wife Paramjeet Kaur, said in Chandigarh.

Sixty-seven-year-old Singh thanked god for being kind to him and said the various governments at the Centre did nothing for any of the prisoners languishing in various jails in Pakistan.

"The Central Government did not bother to take care of my family following my arrest. The government does only the paper work," he said.

Asked whether he was sent to Pakistan by the Military Intelligence and the route he took to go there, Singh said, "Even Pakistan authorities failed to get this information from me."

"I was paid Rs 400 as salary... as per duty, I went to serve the country," he said.

Asked what he would like to say for some other people who are working in similar kind of professions, Singh said: "I was a spy and did my duty... about others I will not comment... I am not president of the country to give reply to such queries."

Singh, who was lodged in seven different jails in Pakistan, said: "I will not tell the story of my ordeal in Pakistani prisons as it will damage the cases of about 100 other such prisoners languishing in jails there."

"Only I can say that I am a firm believer of god and even offered namaz and kept roza (fast) in the Pakistani jails," he said.

When asked how she managed to sustain her family, Kaur said: "I worked as maid. After my husband's arrest, the Central Government gave no compensation to the family and left me in lurch."

Kashmir Singh said in Pakistani prisons he was known by the name of 'Ibrahim'. "I was kept in solitary confinement and remained chained for 17 long years," he said.

Earlier, Singh, along with his wife, met Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal in Chandigarh.

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