Pakistani Seema Ghulam Haidar entered India illegally after meeting Sachin while playing PUBG Mobile
The Pakistani lady who was detained in Greater Noida on Monday for trying to enter India illegally was neither verified nor denied to be a spy by Noida Police on Tuesday.
Who is Pakistani woman Seema Ghulam Haidar who came to Greater Noida to live with lover Sachin she met on PUBG Mobile
What has been the story?
Gautam Buddha Nagar police arrested a 27-year-old #Pakistani woman named Seema Gauhar Khan, who allegedly entered #India without visa, via #Nepal and was living in Greater Noida’s Rabupura area for around a month with a man named Sachin, whom she met through PUBG game. pic.twitter.com/iysouU64qx
— Koustuv 🇮🇳 🧭 (@srdmk01) July 3, 2023
Pakistani woman & her 4 children were detained by police from Greater Noida,where they were allegedly sheltered by a local man who met her through online game PUBG. Police said detainees allegedly entered India via Nepal last month.
How easy it is to enter India illegally. 🙄 pic.twitter.com/IEZFrZcRgl
— Tushar ॐ♫₹ (@Tushar_KN) July 3, 2023
The police said that Seema Ghulam Haidar, a 27-year-old mother of 4, had discovered how to enter India via a YouTube video. She allegedly travelled to Sharjah, Nepal, and Greater Noida by bus. According to the authorities, Seema’s husband worked as a mason in Karachi before departing for Saudi Arabia. In 2019 on PUBG, she met Sachin, her “online” lover. Following that, they continued to communicate via video calls and chat on Instagram and WhatsApp.
Additionally, the police said on Tuesday that Seema had travelled to Kathmandu after visiting Sharjah in March 2023. She and Sachin had met in Nepal, and they had spent seven days together in a hotel. The authorities alleged that after returning to Pakistan, she brought her four children back to Kathmandu on a tourist visa.
The ‘love story’ of Seema Ghulam Haidar
Seema Ghulam Haidar, a woman from Karachi, Pakistan, allegedly crossed two international borders to enter India against the law in order to be with an Indian man she met through the well-known global online game, PUBG. She is currently caught in Noida Police’s grasp. Police believe she could be a spy. There are rumours that Seema entered India illegally approximately a month ago across the open Nepal border.
Seema had travelled from Pakistan in search of Sachin, a native of Rabupura in Greater Noida. Before Seema and Sachin could eventually be married, reportedly, she got caught up in the police dragnet. The lawyer the couple hired to legalise their marriage ended up tipping off the cops. Following the lawyer’s tip, the Noida Police were informed and began looking into Seema and Sachin.
In a significant turn for this very strange “love story,” the two allegedly fled before the authorities could search their leased apartment. Saturday was this. However, the diligent police managed to locate the pair on Monday in a neighbouring region. The authorities have been looking into whether this is a true “Gadar” narrative or a tale of trickery, honey trapping, and espionage since the arrest.
Earlier, Sachin allegedly informed the attorney that he had met the Pakistani woman while playing PUBG. After speaking and playing the online game together for a few days, both of them became close friends.
More about Seema Ghulam Haidar
Sources who spoke exclusively to The SportsGrail said that Seema identified herself as a Karachi resident and stated that her brother is a member of the Pakistani army. She managed to enter India with her four children and an expired Nepal visa on her person in order to reunite with her “online” partner and be married to him.
The lawyer was apparently informed by Sachin that he desired to wed Seema. When Seema continued going sightseeing in Delhi, Sachin had grown reluctant since he anticipated that the two would be caught.
Seema, Sachin, and Sachin’s father Netrapal were all detained by Noida police, and all three have been charged with violating IPC sections 120B (Criminal Conspiracy), 34 (Acts done by several people for the same purpose), section 14 of the Foreigners Act, and sections 3/4/5 of the Passport Act (Entry into India) Act 1920.