Eight Years, Two Names: The Bangladeshi National Who Fooled India

Special | An eNewsroom investigation reveals how a Bangladeshi national evaded authorities for nearly a decade by adopting a fabricated Hindu identity. Despite being flagged by Kolkata Police as early as 2018, the suspect continued to travel across states and circulate inflammatory content. His recent arrest in Uttarakhand during the West Bengal elections now exposes deep systemic failures in national surveillance and document verification

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Kolkata: Amid the high-stakes West Bengal elections, a deeply layered story has slipped under the radar—one that raises serious questions about surveillance, identity, and political timing.

The arrest of Sunnyur Rahman, a Bangladeshi blogger who lived in India under the name Satyanishth Arya, is not just a routine police action. It is a story that stretches back nearly a decade—and one that eNewsroom had flagged as early as 2018.

From Shahbag to Bengal: A Radical Shift in Identity

Sunnyur Rahman first came into the spotlight in Bangladesh after the Shahbag movement, where he reportedly faced public backlash and assault for making derogatory remarks against Prophet Muhammad. Following this, Bangladeshi media reported that he fled the country, allegedly entering India through Nepal.

By the time he surfaced in West Bengal, his identity had dramatically changed. The self-proclaimed atheist had reinvented himself as a Hindu, adopting the name Satyanishth Arya.

But this was not just a change of faith—it came with a pattern.

The 2018 Warning: Early Red Flags and Police Inaction

eNewsroom’s 2018 investigative report documented his presence in Bengal, where he was actively producing and circulating Islamophobic content. He wasn’t limited to social media—he reportedly travelled across villages, engaging directly with people and attempting to provoke communal sentiments.

When contacted at the time, Kolkata Police had acknowledged awareness of his activities, stating that he was under watch.

The Ghaziabad Video That Reopened the Past

Fast forward to December 25, 2025—Christmas Day.

A disturbing video emerged from Ghaziabad showing a bald-headed man with a tilak confronting a pastor inside a church, abusing him and Christian devotees for celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ. He was heard declaring that such celebrations had no place in India.

Initially, many assumed he was a fringe Hindutva activist.

But eNewsroom connected the dots.

The man in the video was none other than Satyanishth Arya—aka Sunnyur Rahman, the same Bangladeshi national reported years ago. Following the video, a Christian organisation filed a police complaint against him.

The Uttarakhand Arrest: Operation Prahar and Official Gaps

Four months later, on April 18, 2026, he was arrested by Pauri Police in Uttarakhand.

According to the official press release, the arrest took place under “Operation Prahar,” a statewide अभियान targeting illegal residents, fake documents, and suspicious individuals.

Police claim that during a routine verification drive in the Ramjhula area of Laxman Jhula on April 16, a suspicious man was detained. His inconsistent answers led to deeper interrogation, eventually revealing his real identity as Saniur Rahman alias Satyasadhu, a Bangladeshi national living illegally in India since 2016.

He had allegedly obtained an Aadhaar card under the fake name Satyanishth Arya. Police recovered an expired Bangladeshi passport (valid till 2018), along with electronic devices and identity documents. A case has been registered under relevant sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita and the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025.

Contradictions and Unanswered Questions

However, the official version leaves gaps.

Police maintain that he had arrived in Uttarakhand just a day before his arrest. But sources said that he had been living there for several months.

This discrepancy adds to a larger set of troubling questions:

  • How did a foreign national manage to live in India for more than eight years using fake identity documents?
  • If authorities were aware of his presence as early as 2018, why was no decisive action taken then?
  • Why did his arrest come only months after a viral communal incident—and notably, during the West Bengal elections?
  • And despite the seriousness of the case, why is there still no clarity on his extradition to Bangladesh?

A Story Bigger Than One Arrest: 8 Years Under a Fake ID

The case of Sunnyur Rahman is not just about one individual. It highlights systemic gaps—how identities can be reinvented, how narratives can be weaponised, and how enforcement can appear selective.

At a time when “illegal infiltration” remains a politically charged issue, this arrest raises an uncomfortable paradox:

A man widely known, reported, and even booked in multiple incidents continued to move across states—until he was finally caught during a politically sensitive moment.

Interestingly, the arrest has triggered sharply divergent narratives across media ecosystems. While several Hindutva-aligned websites and social media handles have portrayed Sunnyur Rahman as a “jihadi infiltrator” who allegedly penetrated Hindu spaces, reports from sections of Bangladeshi media have framed the case very differently—describing it as the arrest of a “Hindutva extremist” who had adopted a fabricated identity to spread hate. This stark contrast in portrayal underscores how the same individual is being interpreted through competing ideological lenses, turning the case into not just a question of identity fraud, but also of narrative construction in a polarised information landscape.

The layers of this story are still unfolding. But one thing is clear—the questions it raises are far from over.

Shahnawaz Akhtar
Shahnawaz Akhtarhttp://shahnawazakhtar.com
Shahnawaz Akhtar is a senior journalist with over two decades of reporting experience across four Indian states and China. He is the Managing Editor and founder of eNewsroom India, an independent, Kolkata-based digital media platform. His work focuses on human-interest reporting, capturing lived realities, resilience, and voices often ignored by mainstream media
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