Pigeon captured and imprisoned after police trust its a Pakistani spy
This pigeon may resemble any another individual from the feathered species however Indian police trusted it was a Pakistani spy and sent the creature to penitentiary for secret activities.
The eventual feathered James Bond was taken to a police headquarters by a 14-year-old, after he found a baffling note joined to the creature – which was composed in Urdu and recorded a Pakistani telephone number.
At the same time, rationale neglected to win, and the creature was captured after police didn't take a stab at ringing the number to check whether the pigeon had been accounted for missing.
And after an X-ray of the bird failed to secure more information, the bird was placed under armed guard to prevent it flying back to Pakistan.
Addressing the Indian Times, Superintendent Rakesh Kaushal clarified that while no confirmation of pigeon surveillance had been discovered, they were still suspicious and had chosen to keep the flying creature in authority.
'Nothing antagonistic has been found, however we have kept the bird our guardianship', he said.
'This is an uncommon occasion of a flying creature from Pakistan being spotted here.
We have gotten a couple of spies here. The range is delicate, given its nearness to Jammu, where infiltration is quite common’.
The eventual feathered James Bond was taken to a police headquarters by a 14-year-old, after he found a baffling note joined to the creature – which was composed in Urdu and recorded a Pakistani telephone number.
At the same time, rationale neglected to win, and the creature was captured after police didn't take a stab at ringing the number to check whether the pigeon had been accounted for missing.
And after an X-ray of the bird failed to secure more information, the bird was placed under armed guard to prevent it flying back to Pakistan.
Addressing the Indian Times, Superintendent Rakesh Kaushal clarified that while no confirmation of pigeon surveillance had been discovered, they were still suspicious and had chosen to keep the flying creature in authority.
'Nothing antagonistic has been found, however we have kept the bird our guardianship', he said.
'This is an uncommon occasion of a flying creature from Pakistan being spotted here.
We have gotten a couple of spies here. The range is delicate, given its nearness to Jammu, where infiltration is quite common’.
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