
US Homeland Security knew in 2020 Pakistani firm illegally sold satellite images to Pak govt
Syed's connection to Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) and the National Development Complex (NDC), the aerospace and defence agency of Pakistan's Ministry of Defence, was uncovered by the US government's Homeland Security Investigation (HIS). ThePrint has access to the complaint filed by HSI before US Magistrate Judge M David Weisman on 15 September 2020. These agencies are responsible for 'weaponizing nuclear technology through missile development and other means,' read the complaint.
New Delhi: Pakistani geospatial firm Business System International Pvt Ltd, purchased satellite images from a Colorado-based company and sold them illegally to the Pakistan government. The firm and its owner, Obaidullah Syed, also made financial dealings and exchanged emails with top officials and agencies directly involved in Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme.
'BSI purchases satellite images from a Colorado-based company and then sells those images to an unspecified arm of the Pakistan government,' read a complaint filed by HSI special agent Jennifer Green.
Though Syed was sentenced to a year in federal prison in 2022 for exporting goods and services from the US to the PAEC, his company became a partner with Maxar in 2023. A few months later, orders for satellite images of Pahalgam started appearing on its portal. ThePrint had exclusively reported that there was an unprecedented spike in orders for Pahalgam in February this year, just two months before the terrorist attack that killed 26 civilians.
Maxar Technologies spokesperson denied that the orders for the satellite images were placed by BSI. However, hours after ThePrint report was published, the firm was removed from Maxar's partner page.
Also read: How Maxar partner fooled US manufactures into aiding Pakistan's nuclear programme
Links with Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme
A Pakistani-American businessman from Northbrook, a suburb in Illinois, Syed had dealings not just with PAEC but with top government bodies and officials in Pakistan.
Between 2006 and 2020, he sent multiple emails to the principal scientific officer of Pakistan's Directorate of Science Division. Employees of BSI Pakistan were also found to be connected with this unnamed officer on social media accounts.
During her investigation, Jennifer Green's team found multiple email exchanges between Syed, BSI, and Pakistani officials, the HSI agent wrote in her complaint. The report cited emails confirming monetary exchange with the director of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, the agency that designs and tests high explosives and nuclear weapon parts, and develops solid-fuelled ballistic missiles.
It also confirmed BSI's dealings with the National Development Complex (NDC), an aerospace and defence agency of Pakistan's Ministry of Defence responsible for the country's programmes aimed at 'weaponizing nuclear technology through missile development and other means'.
'On or about April 28, 2015, a BSI-Pakistan employee emailed his colleagues a copy of a bank check received from the NDC, which special agents obtained pursuant to a warrant to search another BSI-Pakistan employee email account,' the complaint read. It went on to note that the cheque was made payable to BSI-Pakistan and signed by 'NDC Employee A in his capacity as 'Director General (C&S), National Development Complex, Islamabad'.
Maxar Technologies has yet to respond to ThePrint's queries on whether it had conducted any background check on BSI before enrolling a company with a history of federal crime as a partner. The firm has not confirmed whether BSI Pakistan has been officially removed as a partner.
(Edited by Ratan Priya)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
a minute ago
- The Hindu
Army says no ceasefire violation along LoC
The Army on Tuesday (August 5, 2025) said there has been no ceasefire violation along the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir. 'There have been some media and social media reports regarding ceasefire violation in Poonch region. It is clarified that there has been no ceasefire violation along the LoC. Please avoid spreading unverified information,' the Army said in a statement in New Delhi. Earlier, official sources in Jammu said the Pakistan Army had on Tuesday evening (August 5, 2025) indulged in 'unprovoked' firing on forward Indian posts along the LoC, prompting strong retaliation by the Indian Army. The exchange of small arms firing between the two sides continued for nearly 15 minutes in the Mankote sector but there was no immediate report of any casualties, the sources had said, adding it was the first instance of ceasefire violation since Operation Sindoor. Indian and Pakistani militaries engaged in intense clashes between May 7 and 10 after India launched missile strikes targeting terror infrastructure across the border under Operation Sindoor to avenge the Pahalgam terror attack.


Indian Express
a minute ago
- Indian Express
US to initially impose ‘small tariff' on pharma imports, Trump says
President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that the United States would initially place a 'small tariff' on pharmaceutical imports before hiking it to 150% within 18 months and eventually to 250% in an effort to boost domestic production. 'In one year, one and a half years maximum, it's going to go to 150% and then it's going to go to 250% because we want pharmaceuticals made in our country,' Trump told CNBC in an interview. He did not specify the initial tariff rate on pharmaceuticals. Trump said last month that pharmaceutical tariffs could reach as high as 200%. He said in February that sectoral tariffs on pharmaceuticals and semiconductor chips would start at '25% or higher,' rising substantially over the course of a year. Trump said on Tuesday that he plans to announce tariffs on semiconductors and chips in the 'next week or so,' but gave no further details. The United States has been conducting a national security review of the pharmaceutical sector, and the industry has been preparing for possible sector-specific tariffs. The administration has not announced when the results of that probe will be released. Several drugmakers have pledged multibillion-dollar investments in U.S. manufacturing as Trump threatens import tariffs, with AstraZeneca recently committing $50 billion to expand its American operations. PhRMA, the main lobbying group for the industry, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A framework agreement between the United States and the EU sets out that tariffs on pharmaceuticals and semiconductors are currently zero, but if the United States raises tariffs following its import investigation, they will be capped at 15%.


Mint
a minute ago
- Mint
‘Is it even legal': Indian techie claims Hyderabad firm ‘won't give exit documents' if quit within a year, sparks debate
A post by a software engineer on Reddit has gone viral and sparked intense debate across India's tech circles, after revealing a startling clause in his new company's HR policy: no exit documents unless you complete a full year. Posted on the subreddit r/developersIndia, the user Royal-Airline9579 shared their shock after discovering this condition buried in their offer letter. 'Just joined a new company recently and found out something pretty shocking in the HR policy. If you leave the company within 12 months, they won't give you any exit documents — no experience letter, no relieving letter, nothing,' the Redditor wrote. 'Basically, it's like your time there 'didn't exist' if you quit early.' The Reddit user said they understood companies wanting to control high attrition, but called the policy 'super unfair.' 'Especially if someone leaves due to a toxic work environment, better opportunities, health reasons, or literally anything valid.' The Reddit user added that the policy was clearly mentioned in the offer letter, and the company in question is a small, Hyderabad-based service firm with around 100 employees. The post quickly caught fire, with hundreds of comments pouring in. 'A shady organisation's offer letter cannot override the labour laws created to protect us from this alleged mischief. If anything goes south tomorrow, you will always have respective state' labour laws in your favour to fight against it,' one Redditor commented. Another wrote: 'All paper contracts are worth nothing. Not enforceable. Unless it's exactly abiding by laws mentioned. Also, offer letters aren't done on Bond Papers, there's nothing.' Many said the clause was being used to trap employees who might otherwise switch jobs for better offers or a healthier work-life balance. 'This is not "kinda shady". This is extremely shady. Run from such places. Not worth your time at all,' the third user wrote. 'Brother I have multiple short tenures in my CV (6 years, 7 companies) so you get the gist. While I do get asked a lot about it by HRs and some companies definitely must be rejecting me, I'm on my 8th company currently and 7th year of work experience. Might've been a red flag few years back, not so much now. Also, name and shame the company,' the fourth shared. 'All such things in the offer letter tell you that the company has a toxic work culture,' the fifth user remarked.