In a dramatic operation symbolizing the Yogi Adityanath government’s tough stance on illegal religious conversions and land encroachment, authorities on Tuesday razed to the ground a sprawling mansion in Uttar Pradesh’s Balrampur district. The property belonged to Jalaluddin alias Chhangur Baba, the alleged kingpin of a ₹100-crore religious conversion racket spanning multiple states and funded through international channels.
The mansion, located in Madhpur village, had become a nerve center of what investigators are now calling a foreign-funded, caste-targeted conversion syndicate. Constructed illegally over two bighas (approx. 1.3 acres) of gram sabha land, the building was estimated to be worth over ₹3 crore.
Mansion to Rubble: Swift, Symbolic Action
Acting on prior investigation inputs, local authorities arrived early Tuesday morning with eight bulldozers and a heavy police presence. Although the family had been served a seven-day eviction notice just 24 hours earlier, officials cited the seriousness of the national security threat and the risk of evidence tampering as reasons for the accelerated demolition.
Officials confirmed that this was no ordinary residence. According to ATS findings, the mansion operated as a command center for conversion logistics, foreign funding transactions, indoctrination sessions, and recruitment.
Conversion ‘Rate Card’ and Targeting by Caste
The most chilling revelation from the ATS probe is the existence of a caste-based ‘conversion rate chart’, allegedly maintained by Chhangur Baba himself. The chart, which was discovered in a seized diary, reveals that girls from Hindu and non-Muslim communities were priced and targeted with horrifying precision:
₹15–16 lakh for Brahmin, Kshatriya, and Sikh girls
₹10–12 lakh for OBC girls
₹8–10 lakh for girls from Scheduled Castes and other marginalized communities
The diary contained over 100 names, most of them young women and minor girls, who were allegedly lured into conversion through deceit, romance, or coercion; a textbook pattern of ‘love jihad’ recruitment, say officials.
A Foreign-Funded Web of Influence
The ATS has so far tracked ₹100 crore in foreign funding, routed through over 40 bank accounts connected to Chhangur Baba and his aides. Authorities believe this money was sourced from Islamic nations, funneled in to promote mass conversions, and used to finance a network of luxury real estate, showrooms, and political campaigns.
Baba’s travel history with 40+ trips to Islamic countries has further raised red flags about transnational connections. Intelligence agencies now believe the operation was designed not just for religious proselytization, but to alter demographic balances and disrupt communal harmony.
A request has been made to rope in the National Investigation Agency (NIA) and Enforcement Directorate (ED) to probe the funding trail, money laundering, and possible terror links.
From Gemstones to Power: The Rise of Jalaluddin
Jalaluddin’s transformation from a gemstone trader to a self-styled spiritual figure and local strongman is as telling as it is suspicious. After spending time in Mumbai and allegedly building influential ties including with wealthy individuals from the Sindhi community, he returned to Balrampur and reinvented himself as ‘Baba’.
He even contested local elections and tried to expand political clout; a move that investigators believe was aimed at shielding his activities and acquiring legitimacy.
His close aide, Mohammad Ahmed Khan, believed to be the enforcer and property manager, is now under scrutiny. Khan has multiple FIRs across Balrampur, Ambedkar Nagar, and Lucknow, and is suspected of handling the gang’s illegal land acquisitions and safe houses.
Yogi Adityanath: ‘No Mercy for Anti-National Elements’
Responding to the arrests and demolition, Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath released a strong statement:
‘The accused’s activities are not just anti-social; they are anti-national. The safety and dignity of our sisters and daughters is non-negotiable. Every inch of illegally acquired property will be seized. This punishment will be a lesson for those who dare undermine our nation and society.’
This marks one of the most high-profile bulldozer actions under the Yogi government’s ‘zero-tolerance’ policy against mafia, radical networks, and land mafias.
Divided Reactions and Deepening Probe
While social media lit up with praise for the ‘bulldozer justice’ and the state’s crackdown on religious exploitation, critics have raised concerns about due process and the need for a fair trial.
Meanwhile, BJP MP Nishikant Dubey has accused the conversion network of being part of a larger political plot, alleging that the accused received hundreds of crores to convert Hindus in India and Nepal, all in a bid to influence electoral demographics.
A House of Cards Falls, But the Web Remains
With more arrests expected and agencies like NIA and ED entering the scene, the destruction of Chhangur Baba’s mansion is just the beginning. Authorities now face the challenge of dismantling the full network, exposing foreign handlers, unmasking political allies, and ensuring that the exploitation of vulnerable communities never becomes a playbook again.
The rubble left behind in Balrampur is not just bricks and cement; it is the remains of an empire built on manipulation, radicalism, and betrayal.




























