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Betrayed by India: The tale of the Pakistani Hindu refugee

Omar1984

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Betrayed by India: The tale of the Pakistani Hindu refugee


Pakistani Hindus carry an idol of Ganesha, for immersion at Laxmi Narain Temple in Karachi last year. Pakistani Hindu's in India are in perpetual hope that the Indian government will offer them permanent refuge. Reuters


“Hindus are like a fish out of water in Pakistan. They all want to come to India, hoping to put an end to their misery – but it is a different story here altogether,” says Krishan Lal, who is one of a group of 145 Hindus who fled Pakistan on a pilgrimage visa. He now lives in a refugee camp in North Delhi, praying that the Indian government will offer him permanent refuge.

Even as the persecution of Hindus in Pakistan makes headlines, India Today offers a timely and urgent reminder of that “different story” which unfolds on this side of the border – of the fate that awaits these Hindus when they land in India. [The story is unavailable online, but you can check out a brief excerpt here. But this 7 May issue is well worth a trip to the news-stand.]

The Hindu minority, under siege in Pakistan, especially from abductions, rapes, and forcible conversion of their women, is increasingly desperate to get out. The usual trickle of refugees has grow rapidly in the last year. Until mid-2011, 8-10 families crossed the border; that number has now increased to 400.

Even this number, however, is artificially low, kept down by stringent Indian visa regulations, especially after the 2009 Mumbai attack. Only one in five visa applications are approved.

Those lucky enough to cross the border are shoved into refugee camps, where they languish without rights or attention in a “no man’s land.” The Indian government treats them as an inconvenience that is best ignored. Take, for instance, Pujari Lal who fled in1999 after his teenage sister was kidnapped and raped. He now lives in Khanna, Punjab, in a settlement with 1,200 other Hindu and Sikh refugees.

“It has been 13 years but I still don’t have Indian citizenship. My papers have come back a dozen times. They want proof of my father’s date of birth and birthplace. My father is dead: my mother is with me but we do not have all the papers.,” he says.


In a photo from 1971, a Hindu refugee from Pakistan stands outside her makeshift home in Calcutta. Getty Images


This is hardly unusual. As Rajya Sabha MP Avinash Rai Khanna points out in a sidebar, more than 3,500 families who emigrated to Jammu in 1947 have still not received citizenship.

Since they’re not Indian citizens, refugees are still subject to the same restrictions as other Pakistanis: no ration card, driver’s license, right to buy property, gas connection or travel within the country. “When our children fall ill, the government hospitals refuse to give us medicines, saying we are Pakistanis,” says Jamuna Devi.

Most are forced to live a hand-to-mouth, uncertain existence reliant on the whims of the Indian and Pakistani authorities. To remain in the country, they must get their Indian visa extended over and again, and renew their passport – which now the Pakistani consulate insists they do on an annual basis.

And the hope for citizenship remains dim. Of the 148 applications received just from Punjab (in Pakistan) between 2009-2011, only 16 were accepted, 119 are stuck in limbo due to inadequate documents, and 13 have been rejected. Add to this an “active policy of discouragement” that makes it extremely difficult and expensive for Pakistani Hindus to secure a visa, and the message from the Indian state becomes crystal-clear: We don’t want you.

Well, neither seemingly does Pakistan, where minorities have become an easy target in a climate of extremism. The India Today story is filled with heart-rending testimonies of refugees who have lost their wives, daughters and sisters to armed gangs and militias. But these tales are one part of a grim new reality not just for Hindus, but also Christians and minority Muslims such as Hazara and Ahmadi communities. Last September, 26 members of the Hazara community were forced to disembark from a bus by gunmen and shot dead.

A recent minority status report by The Jinnah Institute summed up the ground reality in these terms:

These most recent attacks on religious minorities and the state’s tolerance towards this persecution are part of a longer-term pattern of state complicity at all levels – judicial, executive and legislative – in the persecution of and discrimination against minorities. The findings of this report confirm that the legislature, executive and judiciary have historically played a foundational role in creating two-tiers of Pakistani citizenship, which are defined by whether a person is a Muslim or a non-Muslim.

Furthermore, both democratic processes and martial rule have been used to institute discriminatory laws and practices. It is also clear that the heightened threat of extremism and the ascendency of armed extremist militant groups confronting the Pakistani state have created a situation of “double jeopardy” for Pakistan’s religious minorities who now face the multiple assaults of vigilante attacks, increased physical threats and social persecution from extremist groups, as well as the discriminatory legal frameworks of the state and failure of the state to punish hate crimes. Indeed, the situation for Pakistani minorities has never been more dire than it is today.

The question for Indians is what role will we play in this unfolding tragedy. The answer is invariably muddled by the dynamics of our internal immigration politics. While the BJP has emerged as a champion of Pakistani Hindu refugees, it opposes, for example, Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi’s position that all Bangladeshi migrants “who were compelled to leave their country because of some valid reasons, ‘deserve’ humanitarian consideration, irrespective of their religion.” Muslim migrants are not welcome in Assam, according to the BJP litmus test, because they do not face religious persecution.

But can that kind of double-standard be extended to include visas? In the decision to grant citizenship? And how about fleeing members of minority Muslim sects whose situation is no less dire? Can we be advocates not just for Hindus but also other suffering minorities in our neighbourhood? Offer a safe haven for all those fleeing in desperation?

There are no easy solutions, but what the India Today story makes clear is that the status quo is untenable. We can no longer content ourselves with pro forma expressions of concern even as we reject those who seek our protection.


Betrayed by India: The tale of the Pakistani Hindu refugee | Firstpost

This is hardly unusual. As Rajya Sabha MP Avinash Rai Khanna points out in a sidebar, more than 3,500 families who emigrated to Jammu in 1947 have still not received citizenship.

1947 is when families started migrating. At least they should have gotten citizenship, right?
 
They want to go to india to live a better life so why don't you take them? If you want to be superpower like America, you must give citizenship to these refugees so they can live a better life in india with their fellow hindus.

Uh they are already in India?:undecided:
 
Uh they are already in India?:undecided:

Yes they are in India but your government is not helping them being indian citizens so they can live the life rest of hindus of india live in india, like getting jobs and access to health care, etc..
 
I hope those Hindus in Pakistan can survive until Pakistan became a Secular republic which may be 100 ir 150 years ahead. They are welcomed in India. However bureaucracy will not spare anyone.

Pakistan will never be a Secular country. If they want to go to india, take them and give them citizenship.

Why should they leave pakistan they belong to pakistan and pakistan belongs to them, shame on those who treat them like slaves

There are more than a million Indian immigrants in USA. Why should they leave india, they belong to india and india belongs to them, shame on those who treat them like slaves.
 
Yes they are in India but your government is not helping them being indian citizens so they can live the life rest of hindus of india live in india, like getting jobs and access to health care, etc..

Well its the stupid bureaucracy, but at least they are not being raped and forcefully converted.

Why hasn't PAkistan given citizenship to half a million Bangalis and 3 million or so stranded biharis. I thought Pakistan was the last qila of islam or whatever, and Pakistan was made for the muslims of Sub continent, whats the go with that :rolleyes:
 
Yes they are in India but your government is not helping them being indian citizens so they can live the life rest of hindus of india live in india, like getting jobs and access to health care, etc..
may be because they are Pakistani hindus....thats why
 
Tell you what Omar, you take Geelani and his ilk from Kashmir, and in return we ll take all the Hindus, Hazaras, Qadianis and settle them in Kashmir.

You ll have your nice aryan stock sunni muslim Kashmiris and we ll give refuge to whoever is being persecuted in Pakistan. Win win situation! :woot:
 
Pakistan will never be a Secular country. If they want to go to india, take them and give them citizenship.



There are more than a million Indian immigrants in USA. Why should they leave india, they belong to india and india belongs to them, shame on those who treat them like slaves.

I Think u don't know the difference between citizens and migrants , hindus are the citizens pakistan where as indian migrants in US Are still the citizen of india
 
may be because they are Pakistani hindus....thats why

From Your post it shows that being a hindu is a sin in pakistan

And equally, if not more shameful how you treat them.

Dude non of the Our indian muslims are seeking an asylum in pakistan like hindus in pakistan ... we have full on over here .
 
And equally, if not more shameful how you treat them.

Its not all that bad. People who came from Pakistan in 1947 today own some of the most expensive real estates in New Delhi.

You guys didn't treat em well in your country, and now thanks to your non state actors the visa regime got even stricter. Give them a break eh. Their only mistake perhaps was that they decided to stick around in 1947 hoping for Jinnah's secular Pakistan.
 

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