This Article is From Jul 15, 2022

Pak Journalist Row: Hamid Ansari's Denial Again As BJP Releases Photo

Nusrat Mirza has claimed that he had visited India five times during the UPA rule and passed on sensitive information collected here to his country's spy agency ISI.

Pak Journalist Row: Hamid Ansari's Denial Again As BJP Releases Photo

Clips of Nusrat Mirza's interview in Pakistan have been doing the rounds on social media. (File)

New Delhi:

In the face of a fresh attack by the BJP, ex-vice president Hamid Ansari on Friday said he stands by his previous statement that he never knew or invited Pakistani journalist Nusrat Mirza to any conference.

Nusrat Mirza has claimed that he had visited India five times during the UPA rule and passed on sensitive information collected here to his country's spy agency ISI. He purportedly commented that he had visited India on Mr Ansari's invitations and also met him.

Mr Ansari, however, has dismissed the charge as a "litany of falsehood".

The BJP on Friday stepped up its attack on the Congress over the matter and cited a photograph of Mr Ansari and  Nusrat Mirza purportedly sharing the stage during a 2009 conference in India on terrorism.

"The former Vice President of India stands by his earlier statement that he never knew or invited Pakistan journalist Nusrat Mirza to any conference, including the 2010 conference mentioned by Nusrat Mirza or 2009 conference on terrorism or on any other occasion," a statement from Mr Ansari's office said.

Rebutting the BJP's claim of inviting Nusrat Mirza, Mr Ansari had a couple of days earlier said it is a known fact that invitations to foreign dignitaries by the Vice-President of India are on the advice of the government, generally through the Ministry of External Affairs.

Clips of Pakistani journalist Nusrat Mirza's interview in Pakistan have been doing the rounds on social media for the last few days in which he stated that he attended a seminar on terrorism in India in which Ansari spoke.

Nusrat Mirza also claimed to have given secret and classified information to the Pakistani spy agency Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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