
Pak woman deported after Pahalgam attack to get visitor's visa: Govt to J&K HC
The court, however, stated that the MHA order should not constitute a precedent in any manner.
Rashid (62), a Pakistani citizen who married Sheikh Zahoor Ahmed 35 years ago in Jammu, was deported as part of the decision taken by the Indian government to deport Pakistani nationals staying in India in the aftermath of the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack that claimed 26 lives.
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the home ministry, informed the court that after considerable deliberation and in light of the peculiar circumstances of this case, an in-principle decision had been made to grant a visitor visa to Rashid.
The division bench comprising Chief Justice Arun Palli and Justice Rajnesh Oswal acknowledged this in its order.
The bench further noted that Rashid can pursue the two applications moved by her regarding acquiring Indian citizenship as well as a long-term visa.
The court recorded the submission of the solicitor general and noted that "once an in-principle decision is taken by the competent authority, there is hardly any doubt that, post compliance of the requisite procedures and formalities, the authority would process and accord a visitor's visa to the respondent at the earliest".
The court dismissed Rashid's writ petition seeking relief from the deportation, saying that as a natural consequence, the impugned interim order loses its relevance and thus ceases to exist and operate.
On July 22, Mehta requested the court to defer the proceedings to enable him to explore whether the respondent could be helped in any manner or if it was still feasible to address her concerns.
In response, Rashid's counsel, Ankur Sharma and Himani Khajuria, submitted that she was agreeable to the course suggested by the solicitor general.
On June 6, a single-judge bench of Justice Rahul Bharti ordered the Central government to "retrieve" Rashid.
While passing the order, Justice Bharti observed, 'This court is bearing in mind the background reference that the petitioner was having long-term visa (LTV) status at the relevant point of time, which per se may not have warranted her deportation, but without examining her case in a better perspective and coming up with a proper order with respect to her deportation from the authorities concerned, she came to be forced out.'
Rashid was served with a Leave India Notice on April 28 under Sections 3(1), 7(1), and 2(c) of the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 1946, issued by the Criminal Investigation Department, directing her to leave the country by or before April 29.
She approached the high court and sought interim relief to stay the operation of the order.
However, she was issued an exit permit and escorted to the Attari-Wagah border in Amritsar by the authorities, from where she crossed over to Pakistan.
Rashid, a resident of Jammu's Talab Khatikan area, has four children who continue to reside in Jammu and Kashmir.
Rashid, daughter of Mohammad Rashid from Namuddin Road in Islamabad, entered India on February 10, 1990, via Attari on a 14-day visitor visa to visit Jammu.
She continued to stay under an LTV granted by the authorities on an annual basis. During her stay, she revealed that she married an Indian national.
"It wasn't disputed either that her LTV was valid up to January 13, 2025, and she had applied for an extension on January 4, 2025. But no such extension was ever accorded," the order noted.
Her husband expressed happiness over the decision and thanked the court.
'We are relieved... The entire family was under tension. We were suffering due to the decision (to deport her),' he said.
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Hindustan Times
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The Hindu
25 minutes ago
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The Naxals are receding. Now what?
The car cannot proceed any further. On its way from the Narayanpur district headquarters to Garpa, a village in the district's interiors, the vehicle is forced to an abrupt stop nearly 15 km before the destination. The sedan, built for city roads and a comfortable commute, cannot navigate through a muddy murum (red gravel) pathway. Earth movers, trucks, and tractors pass by. Garpa, like many other villages in the Bastar region of Chhattisgarh, was inaccessible to the district administration until last year, because the Maoists controlled it. Inside the car is Mahru Potai, the secretary of the Garpa village panchayat and its main link to Chhattisgarh's administration. During the commute that takes over an hour, he has been discussing the incremental changes in mainstreaming Garpa and other villages that dot this stretch of the road that runs through the Abujhmad forests. In Bastar, Maoists have been in conflict with the Indian state for the past five decades. 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'Take a cash assistance scheme such as the Mahtari Vandan Yojana, under which women are eligible for ₹1,000 every month. But they have to go to Narayanpur 52 km away on a bus that will cost them ₹200 to and fro. There is a provision of sending the money to the nearest post office but that circles back to the need for a mobile phone, which many here won't be able to afford,' he says. The bus service is new too, so villagers are not used to taking it yet. The road less travelled In another part of Narayanpur — that accounts for 60% of Abujhmad or Maad, a dense, unsurveyed forested area spread across Bastar and Maharashtra's Gadchiroli — lies Kasturmetta village. Here, a Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan (DAJGUA) camp is being held on the weekly haat or market day, when people are expected to converge. The DAJGUA offers 25 Central government schemes spread across 17 ministries. Kasturmetta is on another 'access' where new camps have been set up. Its strategic importance lies in the fact that the camps built from east to west in the past one year connect Narayanpur to Maharashtra via the 130D National Highway and divide the district horizontally. On July 16, the bids for road construction on the last stretch from Kutul to Nilangur on the Maharashtra border (where the last camp is located) were opened, according to the National Highway Authority of India website. To the south of Kasturmetta are still security vacuum areas. It was in this vacuum area that Nambala Keshava Rao alias Basavaraju, general secretary of the banned CPI (Maoist), was gunned down by security forces in Chhattisgarh on May 21. It was seen as one of the biggest successes against left-wing extremism in the country. The Kasturmetta camp is the second such in the district where various departments have set up their booths. Men in lungis, women carrying babies, the elderly holding axes, engage in discussions with officials. The place is abuzz with activity but officials expected a better turnout. 'The target population is nearly 1,500, with residents from villages in 5-10 km expected to come here. We expected 500 at least, but only 100 have come. Lack of awareness, fear, all play a part,' says Lokesh Sharma, the Janpad (a government officer) CEO. The sowing season also keeps some away. Though many parts have camps, they are still sensitive, from a security point of view. Those who have come stand to gain, he notes. Sonmati Podiyami, who is from the Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group, Abujh Maria tribe, says, 'I have come walking from Kalmanar Panchayat. My house is far (4-5 km). I'm here to get an Aadhaar card for my newborn's birth certificate.' Learnings from camps Once government employees began meeting people, they realised that there was little demand for schools. There was, however, demand for rations, health facilities and houses under the Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana-Rural. Brick-and-mortar houses are not easy to build here. Rajesh Usandi, 32, a farmer, says he has applied for a house and received the first instalment of the total ₹2 lakh that the government provides as assistance. 'But the challenge is getting the construction material from Narayanpur. Seven tractor trips have to be made, and each trip costs ₹3,000. This takes away nearly half the assistance amount in transportation,' he says. Availability of skilled labourers is another issue. Bastar Inspector General P. Sundarraj says that among the skill development programmes being run for the surrendered Maoists, there are plans to introduce construction and telecom tower-building training programmes so that what they learn during rehabilitation is more relevant to the region. At and around the haat next to the camp on a cloudy monsoon afternoon, the smell of mahua lingers. A group of youth address each other with a laal salaam (red salute) and then cordially chat with a security forces soldier in uniform. The making of an Aadhaar card For regions that have been outside the government's purview, and yet have been receiving rations and some rudimentary health services, some challenges are unexpected enough to stump officials. Khalkho shares one instance where, in some interior villages, people had an aadhaar card made in 2011-12, but don't have the document. 'Now when we try to make their aadhaar to allow them access to other facilities, we find a duplication problem. We send them to the UIDAI portal to remove the anomaly, but the process may take anywhere from four to six weeks, delaying everything else,' she says. Another problem is connectivity. 'Garpa and the areas beyond are non-electrified and the telecom network connectivity is either poor or non-existent. In one particular case, we had to ferry almost an entire village on a tractor 25 km to get through the process,' Potai says. Among the greenshoots, Khalkho says, is people themselves coming forward to ask for services and assert their rights, shedding the fear instilled by the Maoists. 'Late last year people had come from Thulthuli. It was near the area where the encounter in which 38 Maoists were killed last year. They were looking for work under the NREGA scheme,' she says. She says the government sanctioned a pond construction in June. 'We asked them if there would be a problem if our [administration] people visited these villages, and they asked us to make any contact through the local Sarpanch. Initially, they had to take permission from the Maoists to get any sanction; then there was a vacuum after the encounter. It took a few months for them to finally approach us,' says Khalkho. shubhomoy.s@ Edited by Sunalini Mathew