BANGALORE/CHANDIGARH: An illegal 
            telephone exchange was unearthed in Nelamangala on the outskirts of 
            Bangalore on 
            Wednesday and a sales manager of a cellular service provider and an 
            ex-serviceman were arrested in this connection. The racket came to 
            light following disclosures made by Mohinder Pal Saini, who was 
            arrested in Chandigarh last week for operating long distance international call 
            receiving exchange.  In Nelamangala, the 
            exchange had been set up in Visveswarapura, where a cellular tower 
            was already installed. The arrested are: Kashyap of the cellular 
            firm, and Venkatesh, an ex-serviceman. Police have seized 24 
            cellphones and sophisticated equipment, including Voice Over 
            Internet Protocol (VoIP) service equipment and a dish antenna, all 
            worth Rs 40 lakh.  
            The clandestine racket, being 
            run for the last four months, is said to have caused losses worth 
            crores to the telecom department.  
            The exchange was unearthed by a 
            joint team of BSNL and the police. It was run using V-Sat for 
            receiving international calls and diverting them to various 
            destinations, bypassing official gateways.  
             
            After Saini revealed to 
            Chandigarh police 
            about the Nelamangala exchange, the VSNL vigilance officer in 
            Bangalore was tipped 
            off. BSNL officers and the police raided the premises and seized the 
            equipment. Saini, a Canadian national, told the police he had set up 
            exchanges with the help of two Hong Kong-based persons - Shafeeq and 
            Ajaib Singh Dhillon - who arranged for technical help in 
            India .  
             
            The names of two other persons 
            have cropped up during investigations. They are: Mahesh Giridhar, a 
            resident of Chennai who supplied equipment, and Anand Mishra, a 
            resident of Nepal who provided technical 
        assistance.   |