Chhangur Baba's Conversion Racket: ISI, Evangelicals & Radical Preacher
The recent arrest of Jalaluddin alias Chhangur Baba once known as Navin Bava may have been projected as another bust in a string of illegal religious conversions, but deeper intelligence inputs suggest something far more calculated and insidious: a new model of socio-religious engineering being tested in the India-Nepal border belt, aided not just by local handlers but also by a nexus of Christian missionaries and Pakistan's ISI.
Sources within central security agencies now reveal that Chhangur was experimenting with a 'dual-pipeline' conversion strategy, using both Islamic radical outfits and Christian missionary cells to target disillusioned and economically weak Hindu families in border districts such as Balrampur, Shravasti, Bahraich, Siddharthnagar and Maharajganj.
This hybrid model allowed Chhangur Baba to access two distinct funding streams: evangelical Christian NGOs for soft-stage "humanitarian conversion," and radical Islamic networks for ideological consolidation.