Military conflicts with Pakistan have inspired many Bollywood films, but the film industry of India has had little to offer about diplomacy, discreet but skilled, which helped recovery situations in which brute force was of little use.
An upcoming Bucks that tenders, giving life to the big screen, one of those stories in which a diplomat in Islamabad helped to get an Indian woman who was attracted to Pakistan by a man where he thought he had found love, but that turned out to be a very married thug.
The diplomat of the film entitled, well, the diplomat is JP Singh, who directs the Division of Pakistan (also Afghanistan and Iran) in the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) and it was loaded d’Esfaires in Islamabad when the woman in question, Uzma Ahmed, Uzma Ahmed, returned dramatically to India causing wild celebrations.
With armed guards in tow, Singh personally escort Uzma to the border with Wagah-Attari, driving during most of a hot and sensual night in May 2017, on the Islamabad-Lahore highway. Singh has just been appointed Ambassador of India in Israel.
One of the promotions of John Abraham’s protagonist, who is expected to be launched at the beginning of next month, has a file file from the Commentary of External Affairs S Jaishankar to a television channel last year that Hanuman was a diplomat real. Jaishankar was the Secretary of Foreign Affairs in 2017.
His predecessor Sushma Swaraj had personally supervised the efforts to bring Uzma back home, from the moment she landed in the high Indian commission in Islamabad after deceiving her ‘husband’ Tahir Ali to believe he had a relative working in The Indian mission.
Tahir, whom he met in Malaysia, apparently needed money and Uzma promised to get some of his contact. Once inside the complex, he let go of his tragic love story that ended in forced marriage and manipulation.
According to the sources, the film is a well -investigated and precise account of the events for almost a month, which led to its return. Uzma spent that period in Indian facilities when the Indian government fought against a petition in a local court that defies the Indian custody of women.
Even after the court ruled in his favor, resolving the logistics of his return was a nightmare for the Indian authorities, since Tahir and his arms assistants were often seen not far from the high commission of India. Swaraj held a rare press conference to announce her return, calling her to the daughter of India, and Uzma thanked her and Singh while describing Pakistan as a death trap.