BHOPAL: Almost 13 years after he was caught spying for Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), the Madhya Pradesh police deported Mohammad Sajeed Muneer alias Sameer Kumar to Pakistan even as he cried and begged to be allowed to stay in India. He was handed over to Pakistani authorities by the BSF at the Wagah border.Unlike other spies who try to survive and go back home, Muneer wanted to spend the rest of his life in Bhopal. Not because he likes the hospitality at Bhopal 's detention home or is scared to face the wrath of the ISI, but because of his past.He maintained his stand while he was being escorted to the Wagah border by Madhya Pradesh police sleuths under a high security cover. “He was weeping like a baby while requesting the police to allow him to stay in India,” said an intelligence officer.Back in Pakistan, Muneer alias Abdul, according to the records with the Pakistan police, has many things to fear. First, ISI will be after him and then he would be arrested by Pakistan police in connection to a murder he committed 13 years ago.He was being fed, clothed and sheltered by Bhopal Police since his release from jail 10 months ago.Muneer had told interrogators that his brother was murdered by a local youth. He killed the murderer to settle scores, said officials who interrogated him. He was on the run from Pakistan police when the ISI approached him in 2003, with an offer he couldn't refuse. Police sources claimed, ISI trained him for three months (May 2003 onwards) at a safe house in Karachi and he was sent to India in October the same year.Within a few days in Bhopal, Muneer befriended an elderly man named Abdul Salam, who was almost blind, and convinced him to adopt him as his son. After a month, Muneer found himself a job as a data entry operator.Police arrested him on May 25, 2004, just hours before his wedding to a local girl. During interrogation, he narrated how he was roped in by the ISI to spy on Army bases.The Indian authorities had been trying to deport him, while Pakistan delayed processing his documents, said sources. Muneer was too happy to continue to be a Bhopali and requested the local police not to pursue his deportation.“He was even ready to spend more time in any Indian jail than being handed to Pakistan,” said a police officer.