While six arrests were made this year, the location of those behind the flurry of hoax emails still unknown. 
Telangana

RGIA struggles to trace source of over 30 hoax bomb threat emails despite arrests

The investigation has also been slowed by the use of Virtual Private Network (VPN) services, which route internet traffic through multiple servers, often outside India, masking the sender’s actual IP address.

Siddhardha Gattimi

HYDERABAD: The Rajiv Gandhi International Airport (RGIA) has received more than 30 hoax bomb threat emails over the past three months, but the police have been unable to identify the source, despite multiple investigations.

While six arrests were made this year, the location of those behind the flurry of hoax emails still unknown. The police have made limited progress as far as zeroing in on the hoaxers is concerned.

Shamshabad Deputy Commissioner of Police B Rajesh said six hoaxers were traced and arrested in Gujarat, while acknowledging that several other complaints remain unresolved.

Senior police officials said tracing the origin of the emails has proved difficult, largely due to the use of anonymous, privacy-focused email services. Such platforms allow accounts to be created without personal details such as names, phone numbers or addresses. In several cases, the accounts were accessed through browsers without persistent log-ins, leaving little server-side data for investigators to work with.

The investigation has also been slowed by the use of Virtual Private Network (VPN) services, which route internet traffic through multiple servers, often outside India, masking the sender’s actual IP address.

Officials said this layering makes digital tracking time-consuming and, in many cases, inconclusive.

Most hoax threats sent to RGIA customer support

Most of the threat emails were sent to RGIA’s customer support email ID, automatically triggering security alerts and emergency response protocols at the airport. However, repeated activation of these procedures has not translated into proportionate progress in identifying those responsible.

In August, police arrested a woman from Chennai in Ahmedabad for allegedly sending two hoax threat emails to RGIA following a dispute with her partner. She was traced after investigators issued a Prisoner Transit Warrant. Police said she had sent the emails in her boyfriend’s name after the relationship ended.

In an earlier case in 2017, a 32-year-old Hyderabad-based travel agent was arrested for sending a hoax plane hijack email that led to heightened security at airports in Mumbai, Hyderabad and Chennai. Police said he had sent the email to Mumbai police after he was unable to afford a trip suggested by his girlfriend.

Despite these isolated arrests, police admit that most recent hoax threats remain unsolved, highlighting continuing gaps in tracking and preventing such emails.

Iran disputes Trump’s claims on ceasefire deal as US awaits final sign-off

US envoy says interim trade deal with India in final stages, likely soon

AAP sweeps Punjab civic polls; wins big across municipal corporations, councils

Centre asks state-run fuel retailers to build 30-day LPG reserves amid West Asia supply concerns

NEET-UG to shift to computer-based format from next year, NTA tells SC

SCROLL FOR NEXT