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Pak Hindus barred at Wagah after reports of mass exodus

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Mirza Jatt

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Pak Hindus barred at Wagah after reports of mass exodus

Lahore, Islamabad: Immigration authorities today stopped 130 Pakistani Hindus from crossing over to India at the Wagah land border following a controversy over reports of an exodus of the minority community from Sindh province.

The Hindus were told by immigration officials that they could not cross the border despite having valid visas as they did not have "security clearance," sources told PTI.

The immigration authorities had reportedly received directions from the Interior Ministry not to let any Hindu go to India even for pilgrimage, the sources said.

The Hindu families reached Wagah at 8 am but most of them were not given clearance to cross the border till noon.

Only two families from Karachi that had "no objection certificates" were allowed to cross over to India, the sources said.

However, Federal Investigation Agency official Waqar Haider told PTI in Lahore that his organisation was not stopping anyone possessing valid travel documents from going to India.

The kidnapping of a teenage Hindu girl, Manisha Kumari, from Jacobabad city of Sindh province on August 7 has caused widespread concern in the minority community amidst reports of an exodus of some 250 Hindus from the region.

Hindus from Sindh and Balochistan had decided to migrate to India because of forced conversions, extortion and kidnapping, TV channels reported.

The Hindus were travelling to India on 30-day visas for a pilgrimage to Haridwar and Vaishno Devi but many were not expected to return, the channels reported.

Taking notice of these reports, Interior Minister Rehman Malik yesterday said the Hindus would be stopped from going to India.

He said they would be allowed to travel only after a probe by the FIA.

Malik claimed the reports of the migration of the Hindus were part of a 'conspiracy to defame Pakistan.'

The Indian High Commission should explain why visas were issued to the 250 Hindus, he said.


Reports from Jacobabad said seven Hindu families comprising 90 people had yesterday left for Lahore to travel to India.

'We are businessmen but have been compelled to leave our motherland because of harassment, lawlessness, looting, kidnapping of girls and their forced conversion to Islam,' said Amesh Kumar of Bakhshapur area in Jacobabad.

Another unnamed Hindu man from Quetta told the Dawn newspaper: 'Pakistan is our homeland and at the moment we are going to India for visiting our sacred places. But if I find the situation in India better than in Pakistan, I will prefer to settle there and others also think the same way.'

There were also reports that 52 Hindu families from Jacobabad had migrated to India about six months ago.

Sindh Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah too took notice of the reports of the migration of Hindus and formed a three-member committee of provincial ministers to assess the situation in Jacobabad and submit a report.


Pak Hindus barred at Wagah after reports of mass exodus
 
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Hindu Pilgrims allowed to cross border after protests
Hindu pilgrims allowed to cross border after protest – The Express Tribune

LAHORE: The Hindu pilgrims earlier stopped at the Wagah Border for not having permits issued by the interior ministry were allowed to cross into India after they staged protests there, Express News reported on Friday.

Immigration authorities had stopped 242 Hindu pilgrims from crossing the Wagah Border into India but allowed two families, who had permits issued by the interior ministry, to do so.

The permit, according to Express News, is a No Objection Certificate (NoC).

The remaining people were stopped in wake of the notice taken by the interior ministry on news of possible migration of various hindu families from Pakistan fearing persecution and danger to their life and property.

One of the pilgrims said that it was illegal not to let them cross the border as they had their visas with them.

“If we are not allowed to go to India, why were we issued visas?” he said, adding that they had been travelling for hours.

Dispelling rumors of migration, he said that they perform this pilgrimage every year and always return to Pakistan.

Only six people had reached Lahore from Sindh last night and the rest arrived by bus.

An imigration official said that the families barred from leaving were told that their cases would be decided within 48 hours.

Earlier, Interior Minister Rehman Malik had said that it was propaganda and that the people were going on a pilgrimage, adding that the Indian High Commission had been asked to explain why it issued visas to 250 Hindu citizens of Pakistan.

Provincial Excise and Taxation Minister Mukesh Kumar Chawla had also dismissed the travel of the Hindus and explained their visas as 40-day pilgrimage travel permits.
 
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They were pilgrims and they didn't have NOC. That's why they were stopped.


read the article again...

"Taking notice of these reports, Interior Minister Rehman Malik yesterday said the Hindus would be stopped from going to India."

althouigh the reason shown is the lack of NOC but it is already determined thatthey would be stopped following the reports of Hindus not coming back due to seurity problems in the country.
 
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After they held a protest they were allowed to cross into India today.

Malik claimed the reports of the migration of the Hindus were part of a 'conspiracy to defame Pakistan.'

The Indian High Commission should explain why visas were issued to the 250 Hindus, he said.

Whats NOT a conspiracy to defame Pakistan? The more I read on the forum, the more my sense of reality gets blurred. Instead of doing something for the Hindus, these people are as always worried about their fake pride and fake claims of the place of minorities in their promised religious state.
 
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This report must be written by an Indian troll who didn't use his brain :D
now you guys carry on
 
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