A shocking case of love jihad and illegal infiltration has come to light from Hyderabad’s Banjara Hills. Fahad, a man of Pakistani origin, concealed his identity with forged documents, lured a Hindu woman named Kirti, and later forced her into conversion and marriage.
According to the police, Fahad had been living in Hyderabad under a false identity, securing employment at a Hi-Tech City–based firm, Sipal, using forged documents.
Back in 2016, Fahad forced Kirti to convert to Islam, renaming her “Doha Fatima,” before marrying her. The couple lived together for years until Kirti discovered that Fahad was attempting the same deception with another woman from his office. Betrayed, she approached the police, leading to Fahad’s arrest.
Investigations revealed he coerced her into taking loans worth ₹20 lakh, burdening her with the repayments. Authorities have begun probing his use of fraudulent Aadhaar, PAN, and voter ID documents. Police are also exploring whether other women may have been similarly targeted.
The Broader Concern
Fahad’s story is not just about one deceitful marriage. It is about the dangers of infiltrators exploiting loopholes in India’s system to manipulate vulnerable women and destabilize society from within.
Fahad entered India in 1998 with his Indian mother after his Pakistani father died, yet he acquired Indian citizenship only in 2018, two years after his marriage to Kirti. This raises serious questions about how he managed to obtain documents and secure employment before acquiring citizenship.
Cases like this highlight how identity fraud and religious coercion can be weaponized, not only against individuals but against the cultural fabric of the nation. The pattern, fake marriages, forced conversions, and emotional exploitation, is disturbingly familiar and cannot be brushed aside as isolated.
Kirti’s courage in coming forward despite years of emotional trauma deserves recognition. It is a reminder that while victims suffer silently, only when they step forward can such networks be dismantled.
Why This Case Matters
This case is not merely about personal betrayal; it underscores a larger national security risk. An infiltrator from Pakistan lived undetected for years, exploited forged documents, preyed on vulnerable women, and operated freely in India’s tech hub.
That a Pakistani national could weave himself so deeply into Indian society with fraudulent papers is a glaring red flag. It is a reminder that illegal infiltration is not just a border issue but a social and civilizational challenge.
A Needed Course of Action
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Strict scrutiny of citizenship processes to ensure no foreign infiltrator exploits Indian identity systems.
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Stronger laws against religious coercion and deceitful marriages.
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Support systems for victims so they feel empowered to seek justice.
For Hindus across the country, this case also reinforces the urgency of addressing Love Jihad and similar threats openly, without fear of political correctness.
And while the challenge is real. It is reassuring that on Independence Day itself, Prime Minister Modi acknowledged the conspiracy of demographic change and infiltration as a national concern. His announcement of a High-Powered Demography Mission signals that this issue is not being ignored but addressed at the highest levels of leadership.


