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You are here: Home / Archives for 2022

Archives for 2022

520,000+ refugees have fled Ukraine since Russia waged war

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

Budapest (AP): The mass exodus of refugees from Ukraine to the eastern edge of the European Union showed no signs of stopping Monday, with the UN estimating more than 520,000 people have already escaped Russia’s burgeoning war against Ukraine.

Long lines of cars and buses were backed up at checkpoints at the borders of Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and non-EU member Moldova.

Others crossed the borders on foot, dragging their possessions behind them.

Several hundred refugees were gathered at a temporary reception centre in the Hungarian border village of Beregsurany awaiting transport to transit hubs, where they would be taken further into Hungary and beyond.

Maria Pavlushko, 24, an information technology project manager from Zhytomyr, 100 kilometers (60 miles) west of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, said she was on a skiing holiday in the Carpathian mountains when she got word from home that Russia’s invasion had begun.

My granny called me saying there is war in the city, she said.

Pavlushko plans to travel from Hungary to Poland, where her mother lives. But her grandmother is still in Zhytomyr, she said, and her father stayed behind to join the fight against the invading Russian forces sent in by Vladimir Putin.

I am proud about him, she said. A lot of my friends, a lot of young boys are going … to kill (the Russian soldiers).

Many of the refugees in Beregsurany, as in other border areas in Eastern Europe, are from India, Nigeria and other African countries, and were working or studying in Ukraine when the war broke out.

Masroor Ahmed, a 22-year-old Indian medical student studying in Ternopil in western Ukraine, came with 18 other Indian students to the Hungarian border.

He said they hoped to reach the capital of Budapest, where India’s government has organised an evacuation flight for its citizens.

While Ternopil had not yet experienced violence when they left: It might be that there is bombing next hour, next month or next year. We are not sure, that’s why we left that city.

Hungary, in a turnaround from its long-standing opposition to immigration and refusal to accept refugees from the Middle East, Africa and Asia, has opened its borders to all refugees fleeing Ukraine, including third-country nationals that can prove Ukrainian residency.

As part of an agreement with some foreign governments, Hungary has set up a humanitarian corridor to escort non-Ukrainian nationals from the border to airports in the city of Debrecen and the capital, Budapest.

Priscillia Vawa Zira, a Nigerian medical student in the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv, said she fled toward Hungary as the Russian military commenced an assault.

The situation was very terrible. You had to run because explosions here and there every minute,” she said.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi, speaking by video to the UN Security Council, said more than 520,000 refugees had fled Ukraine, a number he said has been rising exponentially, hour after hour.”

The UN expects the total to reach 4 million in the coming weeks, Grandi said.

In Poland, which has reported the most arrivals at more than 280,000, trains continued to bring refugees into the border town of Przemysl on Monday.

In winter coats to protect them against near-freezing temperatures, many carried small suitcases as they exited the station.

Polish UN Ambassador Krzysztof Szczerski, speaking at the General Assembly, said that in addition to Ukrainians, those coming in Monday included people of some 125 nationalities, including Uzbeks, Nigerians, Indians, Moroccans, Pakistanis, Afghans, Iranians, Iraqis, Turks and Algerians.

Otoman Adel Abid, a student from Iraq, fled to Poland from the western Ukrainian city of Lviv after he said panic broke out among many in the city.

Everyone ran to buy some food and we heard bombs everywhere, he told The Associated Press. After that we directly packed our bag and clothes and some documents and we ran to the train station.

Natalia Pivniuk, a young Ukrainian woman from Lviv, described people crowding and pushing to get on the train, which she said was very scary, and dangerous physically and dangerous mentally.

People are under stress … and when people are scared they become egoist and forget about everything, she said. People are traumatized because they were on that train.

Maxime Guselnikov was leaving Poland to return to Ukraine to take up arms against Russia, he said, adding that his wife and daughter are still in Kyiv along with friends and colleagues.

I return to Kyiv to fight, he said.

The Russians came to kill our brothers, soldiers, our children, mothers, sons. I go to take revenge for it. I should react. Many of those fleeing Ukraine were travelling on to countries further west.

Aksieniia Shtimmerman, 41, arrived with her four children in Berlin Monday morning after a three-day journey from Kyiv.

Sitting on a bench inside the German capital’s main train station, she attempted to decipher a leaflet with instructions and maps on how to reach a shelter for new arrivals.

As she tried to comfort her crying 3-year-old twin boys, Shtimmerman said she had worked in telecommunications at a Kyiv university but was now only seeking a place where she and her children could eat, sleep and rest.

I grabbed my kids on Friday morning at 7 am to run away from the war, Shtimmerman said. I can’t even count anymore how many different trains we took until we arrived here.

Germany’s interior ministry said 1,800 refugees from Ukraine had arrived by early Monday, but that the number was constantly growing as more trains from Poland arrived.

In the Romanian town of Siret, the EU commissioner for home affairs, Ylva Johansson, visited a border crossing where thousands of refugees were entering from neighboring Ukraine.

Johansson, who visited some of the humanitarian stations at the border, commended the heartwarming cooperation between volunteers and the authorities, and said the EU is united in a way we have never seen before.

She said it was a very difficult time where we see war in Europe again, where we see aggression, invasion from Putin towards a sovereign, neighbouring country.

Europe is showing that we are based on other values than Putin, she said. (AP)

Filed Under: India, News & Politics

Ukraine crisis: India calls for immediate cessation of violence

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

United Nations: India has said that it was deeply concerned over the deteriorating situation in Ukraine and reiterated its call for immediate cessation of violence and end to hostilities, saying all differences can only be bridged through honest, sincere and sustained dialogue.

India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador T S Tirumurti told a rare emergency special session of the UN General Assembly on Ukraine convened on Monday that New Delhi is doing whatever it can to undertake immediate and urgent evacuation efforts of Indian nationals still stranded in Ukraine.

“India is deeply concerned that the situation in Ukraine continues to deteriorate. We reiterate our call for immediate cessation of violence and end to hostilities, Tirumurti said.

“My government firmly believes that there is no other choice but to return to the path of diplomacy, he said.

Noting that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has advocated this strongly in his recent conversations with the leadership of the Russian Federation and Ukraine, Tirumurti said, “We reiterate our firm conviction that all differences can only be bridged through honest, sincere and sustained dialogue.

He said there is an urgent and pressing humanitarian situation developing in Ukraine.

India is doing whatever it can to undertake immediate and urgent evacuation efforts of Indian nationals who are still stranded in Ukraine. The safety and security of Indian nationals, including a large number of students, remains our top priority, he said.

He noted that the complex and uncertain situation at the border crossings is adversely impacting the uninterrupted and predictable movement of people.

This important humanitarian necessity must be immediately addressed, he said.

India thanked all neighbouring countries of Ukraine who have opened their borders for Indian citizens and given all facilities to Indian missions and their personnel to evacuate Indian nationals to their homeland.

“We stand ready to help those from our neighbours and developing countries who are also stranded in Ukraine and may seek assistance, he said.

Filed Under: India, News & Politics

At rare UN session, Russia is pressed to stop war in Ukraine

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

United Nations: Ambassadors from dozens of countries on Monday backed a proposal demanding that Russia halt its attack on Ukraine, as the UN General Assembly held a rare emergency session during a day of frenzied and sometimes fractious diplomacy surrounding the five-day-old war.

If Ukraine does not survive … international peace will not survive,” Ukrainian Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya said at the assembly’s first emergency meeting since 1997.

Have no illusions. If Ukraine does not survive, we cannot be surprised if democracy fails next.

Reflecting escalating global alarm, both of the UN’s major bodies the 193-nation assembly and the smaller, more powerful Security Council took the unusual step of holding simultaneous, hastily scheduled meetings on the war. In Geneva, the UN Human Rights Council voted to hold its own urgent session.

Tension permeated the diplomatic discourse: The Security Council meeting opened with the news that the United States was kicking out 12 Russian UN diplomats whom Washington accused of spying.

Meanwhile, Russian and Ukrainian officials held talks on the Belarus border, agreeing only to keep talking.

The guns are talking now, but the path of dialogue must always remain open, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told the assembly. We need peace now.

Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia reiterated his country’s assertions that what it calls a special military operation in defense of two breakaway areas in eastern Ukraine was being misrepresented.

Russian actions are being distorted and thwarted,” he complained. Russia has repeatedly sought to blame Ukraine for what Moscow claims are abuses of Russian speakers in the eastern enclaves.

The Russian Federation did not begin these hostilities that were unleashed by Ukraine against its own residents,” he said. Russia is seeking to end this war.

The assembly session came three days after an attempt to condemn and stop Russia’s attack ran into a Russian veto in the Security Council.

The assembly will give all UN members an opportunity to speak about the war.

More than 110 signed up to do so, with speeches to continue Tuesday. The assembly, which allows no vetoes, is expected to vote later in the week on a resolution coordinated by European Union envoys, working with Ukraine.

The draft resolution, obtained by The Associated Press, demands that Russia immediately stop using force against Ukraine and withdraw all troops. It urges an immediate peaceful resolution through dialogue and negotiations, and it deplores what it calls Russia’s aggression and the involvement of Belarus, which is siding with Moscow.

Assembly President Abdulla Shahid opened Monday’s session by asking all envoys to stand for a moment of silence. In hours of speeches afterward, dozens exhorted their colleagues to vote yes.

With the Security Council having failed to deliver against its responsibilities, we, the General Assembly, must now stand up to play our part, said New Zealand’s ambassador, Carolyn Schwalger.

Austrian Ambassador Alexander Marschik appealed to those who have good relations with Russia, saying that “a good friend, an honest friend, will speak up and say what needs to be said and what needs to be done when a friend commits an illegal and evil act.

But Russian ally Syria accused the West of a politics of hypocrisy, noting that various other conflicts over the years haven’t gotten such special attention.

This historic emergency session on the situation in Ukraine completes the anti-Russian campaign that finds its origins in the provocative and hostile rhetoric towards Russia, propagated by the West to stoke tensions in Ukraine and compromise Russia’s security, Syrian Ambassador Bassam Sabbagh said.

China, another Russian ally, called for respecting all countries’ sovereignty and internationally recognized borders but didn’t directly address the resolution.

Instead, Ambassador Zhang Jun encouraged fostering a conducive atmosphere for Russian-Ukrainian talks and frowned on any approach that may exacerbate tensions.

Nothing can be gained from stirring up a new Cold War, but everyone will stand to lose,” he said.

The Security Council meeting later Monday was focused on the humanitarian impact of Russia’s invasion, but the session began with a prickly exchange about the Russian diplomats’ expulsion from the U.S.

Nebenzia bristled to the council that the expulsions were yet another hostile step by Washington. U.S. Deputy Ambassador Richard Mills said the dozen diplomats were engaged in undiplomatic activities.

Olivia Dalton, a spokesperson for the United States’ U.N. mission, later said in a statement that the 12 were intelligence operatives who were engaging in espionage activities that are adverse to our national security.” Nebenzia, in remarks to The Associated Press, dismissed the assertion as a pretext.

With the UN saying the war is creating an already alarming and potentially massive humanitarian and refugee crisis, France and Mexico planned to propose a humanitarian-focused Security Council resolution.

French Ambassador Nicolas de Riviere said Sunday it would demand the end of hostilities, protection of civilians, and safe and unhindered humanitarian access to meet the urgent needs of the population. 

Filed Under: News & Politics, World

India to send 4 Union ministers to oversee evacuation, humanitarian assistance for border areas

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

New Delhi: India on Monday decided to send four senior ministers as the prime minister’s special envoy to Ukraine’s bordering nations to oversee the evacuation of Indians and announced relief supplies to the war-torn country to help it deal with the humanitarian situation on its frontiers.

Chairing a high-level meeting, his second on Monday to review the efforts to back the Indians from Ukraine, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said that India will help people from neighbouring as well as developing countries who are stranded in Ukraine.

“The prime minister said that the entire government machinery is working round the clock to ensure that all Indian nationals there are safe and secure,” the Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement.

It said that Modi pointed out that the visit of four senior ministers as his special envoys to various nations will “energise the evacuation efforts” and that it is reflective of the priority the government attaches to it.

At a media briefing, the MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said Union Minister Hardeep Puri will go to Hungary, Jyotiraditya Scindia will oversee the evacuation process in Romania and Moldova, Kiren Rijiju will travel to Slovakia and Gen (retd) V K Singh is leaving for Poland.

“The prime minister noted that the first consignment of relief supplies to Ukraine to deal with the humanitarian situation on Ukraine’s borders would be despatched tomorrow,” the MEA said.

“Guided by India’s motto of the world being one family, the prime minister also stated that India will help people from neighbouring countries and developing countries who are stranded in Ukraine and may seek assistance,” it said.

The decisions came as India ramped up efforts to take out more citizens from the conflict zones notwithstanding the “complex and fluid” ground situation.

Bagchi, at the briefing, said around 8,000 Indians left Ukraine since the first advisory was issued earlier this month and a total of 1,396 Indians were brought back home in six flights after the evacuation mission was launched.

Two of these Air India flights from Romanian capital Bucharest and Hungarian capital Budapest landed in Delhi on Monday with 489 Indian nationals.

Other private carriers such as SpiceJet, IndiGo and Air India Express have also sent their planes to the two cities for evacuation of Indians as the Ukraine airspace is closed for civilian aircraft.

MEA officials told a parliamentary panel that 13 other flights are planned in the next 2-3 days and subsequently nine flights a day, according to sources.

Bagchi said India managed to accelerate the evacuation process in the last 24 hours as a new border crossing has been opened through Moldova for taking the Indians to Romania and there was an improvement in the movement of people through the Polish transit point.

Bagchi said India is encouraging its citizens, particularly students, to move towards Western Ukraine and emphasised that they should not reach the border directly .

Depleting food stocks and long queues for water are adding to the trauma of stranded Indian students some of whom have complained of being roughed up by security personnel on Ukraine borders and spending freezing nights out in the open.

I want my son in front of my eyes as soon as possible,” said Kamini Sharma, who is praying for the safe return of Vibhor Sharma (22), a resident of Indore in Madhya Pradesh. Vibhor is pursuing a medical course at the Ternopil National Medical University.

Payal Panwar, a final year medical student who returned to her Kotdwar home in Uttarakhand, said the stranded students need help of the Indian government and the Indian embassy people more while they are still inside Ukraine rather than when they have moved out of the war-torn country.

“While you are inside Ukraine it is really difficult with food supplies running out and no cash in ATMs” said Payal, who studies in Ivano-Frankivsk city in western Ukraine.

Amid mounting concerns over the safety of Indians in Ukraine, the country’s envoy Igor Polikha said that his government is helping the stranded Indians and extending assistance in their evacuation notwithstanding the “very difficult” ground situation.

Specifically asked about the safety of Indians, he said that assurance can only be given by Russian President Vladimir Putin. He also said that Ukraine was looking for humanitarian assistance from India.

Polikha also rubbished the suggestion that Ukrainian authorities were discriminating against Indian citizens after India abstained from a UN Security Council resolution deploring the Russian military attack on the country.

Bagchi said the “situation on the ground in terms of evacuation continues to be “complex and fluid” but India has managed to accelerate the evacuation process.

“You have seen media reports. Some of them are concerning. Nevertheless, we have been able to accelerate our evacuation process clearly over the last 24 hours,” he said.

The MEA spokesperson also urged the Indian students not to panic.

“I do not think the students should panic. They should try to go to the western parts of Ukraine while contacting our control rooms and sharing their locations so that we can get them registered for their exit,” he said.

Separately, the Indian embassy in Ukraine advised all Indian students stranded in Kyiv to reach the railway station in the Ukrainian capital for their onward journey to the western parts of the war-torn country.

However, an Indian student who managed to reach the Kyiv train station said Ukrainian guards were not allowing students to board trains and were also beating up people.

It’s getting difficult for us to stay here, Ansh Pandita told PTI as scores of Indian students, including women, sat huddled at the teeming Vokzal railway station in Kyiv, holding a large tricolour aloft so they could be recognised in the crowd and no one from the group gets lost.

With a large number of Indians stuck at the Polish border point along with several thousand others of different nationalities, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar spoke to his counterpart from Poland Zbigniew Rau

“Discussed the Ukraine developments with @RauZbigniew of Poland.

Appreciate Poland’s facilitation of the evacuation of Indian students from Ukraine. His words of support in that regard are very welcome,” he tweeted.

Bagchi said India’s focus has been on evacuating its nationals through the land border crossings, noting that there has been some improvement in the movement of people into Poland though the situation on its border is still difficult.

He said there has been progress in the evacuation of people along the border in Romania and that exiting through the Hungarian transit point is also picking up momentum.

Bagchi said flights are not a constraint.

“We will add more flights as needed. We are continually augmenting the number of MEA teams in border crossing points. We are also augmenting a number of officials in the nearby countries,” he said.

India is using the land routes to evacuate its citizens as Ukraine has closed its airspace for civilian aircraft following the Russian attack.

Filed Under: India, World

BJP hatching conspiracy to end reservation: Akhilesh Yadav

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

Ambedkarnagar (UP): Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav on Monday claimed the BJP is hatching a conspiracy to end reservation and hence, is selling government organisations to the private sector.

Addressing an election meeting in the Jalalpur assembly constituency, Yadav said his party will win all the seats of Ambedkarnagar as well as of neighbouring Azamgarh district in the Uttar Pradesh Assembly polls.

“The BJP is hatching a conspiracy to end reservation, and hence it is selling government organisations to the private sector,” he said.

Ambedkarnagar has five assembly seats and will vote on March 3 in the sixth phase. Azamgarh, with 10 assembly seats, will vote on March 7 in the last phase.

The BJP is in a bad situation after the polling so far, Yadav claimed.

“In the five phases of elections, the people of the state have rejected the BJP, and by the time the sixth phase comes, it will become certain that the BJP would be wiped off,” Yadav said.

With the high-octane Uttar Pradesh Assembly polls reaching the Purvanchal region of the state, caste factor appears to be gaining prominence.

Regional parties like the ones led by Om Prakash Rajbhar (SBSP) and Anupriya Patel (Apna Dal-Sonelal), which have formed alliances with the SP and the BJP respectively, have support bases in their respective castes in this region.

Filed Under: ELECTION, India

Mangaluru: Dead body of 16-year-old boy who went missing on Sunday found in suspicious condition

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

Mangaluru: The dead body of a 16-year-old boy who went missing on Sunday was found on Monday at Nethravathi River at Hoigebazar here in the city.

The deceased boy has been identified as Drishyanth (16), a 9th-grade student of Rosario School in Pandeshwar. Drishyanth is the son of Asha and Chinappa, residents of Mahakali Padpu in the city.

According to the reports, Drishyanth was last seen commentating at a cricket match at Mahakali Padpu ground on Sunday afternoon around 3:30 pm. He reportedly left from the ground along with some of his friends.

When he did not return home till evening, his parents enquired about him to his friends who were clueless about his whereabouts. The parents then filed a complaint at Mangaluru South Police Station.

His dead body was found on Monday evening. Reports further added that the boy was wearing pants when he went missing but his dead body was found only with underwear. A case in this regard has been registered at the local police station and further investigations are underway.

Filed Under: India, Karnataka

Chaitra Kundapur stopped by police while trying to enter Kalaburagi district, sent back

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

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Chaitra Kundapur stopped by police while trying to enter Kalaburagi district, sent back

Yadgiri: Sangh Parivar activist Chaitra Kundapur was on Monday stopped by police and sent back while she was enroute to Kalaburagi district through Yadgiri.

She was on her way to Kalaburagi to participate in the Aland Chalo program organized by Sangh Parivar to go to Ladla Mashak Darga in Aland for the purification of Shivalinga at the Dargah site on the occasion of Shivratri.

She was stopped after the District Administration had barred her entry into the district from February 27 – March 3 in the wake of the event. The DC had issued the orders after the SP submitted a report in this regard seeking a ban on entry of Chaitra and Sri Ram Sene Chief Pramod Mutalik in the district as it could disturb peace and harmony.

She was stopped by a team of Dy.SP Umesh Chikkamath, PI Santosh Hallor, PSI Mahantesh Patil while she was trying to go to Aland through Yadgiri on Monday evening. She was later sent back by the police party.

Filed Under: India, Karnataka

Will not stop tweeting, will not stop questioning: Actor Chetan Kumar after his release from jail

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

Will not stop tweeting, will not stop questioning: Actor Chetan Kumar after his release from jail

Bengaluru: Sandalwood actor Chetan Kumar Ahimsa who was arrested over a tweet on a judge hearing the Hijab row, was on Monday released from jail after a court had granted him bail on Friday.

The Court while hearing his bail plea had granted him bail on Friday evening but owing to the fourth Saturday, the formalities were pending and he was released on Monday.

After his release from jail, Chetan said he would not stop tweeting and questioning.

“This is democracy and we have the right to question. I will not stop questioning irrespective of who is against me,” he said after his release from jail.

Filed Under: bangalore, India

268 new COVID-19 cases in Karnataka, 14 deaths

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

Bengaluru: Karnataka on Monday registered 268 fresh coronavirus cases and 14 virus-related fatalities, taking the aggregate to 39,41,063 and the toll to 39,950.

There were 1,119 discharges, pushing the total number of recoveries in the state to 38,95,452, a Health bulletin said.

Of the new cases, 161 were from Bengaluru Urban that saw 550 people being discharged and 10 virus-related deaths.

The total number of active cases across the state is now 5,623.

While the positivity rate for the day stood at 0.70 per cent, the case fatality rate (CFR) was 5.22 per cent.

Of the 14 deaths, 10 were from Bengaluru Urban, and one each from Ballari, Hassan, Koppal and Mandya.

After Bengaluru Urban, Tumakuru recorded the second highest number of cases at 14, followed by Dakshina Kannada (13), Mysuru (11), Shivamogga (10), Ballari, Kodagu and Koppal (7) and others.

Bengaluru Urban district now has a total of 17,78,522 cases, while Mysuru has 2,29,280 and Tumakuru 1,59,735.

Cumulatively, a total of 6,45,01,885 crore samples have been tested, of which 38,054 were on Monday alone.

Filed Under: bangalore, India

How long can a person be inside, SC asks Centre about Pak national lodged in detention centre

March 1, 2022 by Nasheman

New Delhi: The Supreme Court Monday asked the Centre to make its stand clear on the status of a Pakistani national who has been languishing in a detention centre for seven years as Islamabad refuses to accept him as its citizen, saying how long can you keep a person inside?

A bench of Justices D Y Chandrachud and Surya Kant asked Additional Solicitor General K M Nataraj to seek instruction whether 62-year-old Mohammad Qamar can be released for a brief period to enable him to apply for Indian citizenship as his five-children are Indian citizens.

Nataraj said, This is a peculiar case. I need to take instruction. We are not bound by what Pakistan is saying. A person convicted under the Foreigners Act has to be kept in a detention centre. He cannot be allowed to go out. This is the statutory requirement .

The bench said, Question is that he has served his sentence of 3 years and six months. Now after serving his sentence, he has been lodged in a detention centre since 2015, awaiting his deportation. At the time, when Pakistan has refused to accept him as its citizen, how long can you keep a person inside?

It said that Qamar has said that he wishes to apply for Indian citizenship as his children are all Indian citizens.

You please take instructions, whether he can be released for a brief period, so that he can apply for Indian citizenship. Granting citizenship is your call, we are not going to interfere with that , the bench said, and posted the matter for further hearing after three weeks.

Senior advocate Sanjay Parikh, appearing for Qamar’s children, who have sought their father’s release from the detention centre, pointed to an order of the top court by which it had directed the Centre to release detenues in the detention centres of Assam who had been lodged for more than two years in view of the pandemic.

Earlier, this month the top court had sought Centre’s reply on the plea filed by Qamar’s children.

Mohammad Qamar, 62, was arrested on August 8, 2011 from Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, and was held guilty by a court here for overstaying his visa. He was sentenced to three years and six months in jail and a fine of Rs 500.

Having completed his sentence on February 6, 2015, Qamar, was sent to the detention centre at Lampur in Narela here on February 7, 2015 for deportation to Pakistan. However, the Pakistan government did not accept his deportation and he is still languishing at the detention centre.

According to his daughter and son, who have moved the top court through advocate Srishti Agnihotri, their father Qamar alias Mohammad Kamil was born in India in 1959.

He (Qamar) had gone with his mother from India to Pakistan as a child of around 7-8 years in 1967-1968 on a visa to meet his relatives there. However, his mother died there, and he remained in Pakistan in the care of his relatives , the plea of habeas corpus filed in the top court said.

It said that Qamar, on attaining adulthood, came back to India on a Pakistani passport in around 1989-1990 and got married to Shehnaaj Begum, an Indian citizen, in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh.

Out of this wedlock, five children were born , the plea said, adding that Qamar has no documentary proof to show that he had gone with his mother to Pakistan in around 1967-68 and his mother died there and therefore, his story has not been believed.

Nevertheless, the undisputed fact is that he came to India around 1989-90 on a passport of Pakistan and did not renew his visa due to lack of education and, subsequently, got married here, it said.

In Meerut, he was doing menial jobs and residing there along with his family, who all have Aadhaar cards issued by UIDAI, the plea said.

Initially, Qamar filed a plea before the Delhi High Court in 2017, praying for his release so that he can stay with his family.

During arguments, his counsel had submitted that Qamar would apply for Indian citizenship in accordance with law and also make a representation to the respective authorities giving particulars of all the family members who would stand security in case he is released from the detention centre.

The High Court, in its order dated March 9, 2017, disposed of his plea directing that his representation be considered as per law.

Qamar’s son, as per the order of the High Court, made a representation to civil authority on August 11, 2017, under the provisions of the Foreigners Act to allow his father to reside with his family and take proper steps for registering him as an Indian citizen and also for getting proper medical treatment for his illness.

The plea said, meanwhile, with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the top court on April 13, 2020 passed an order in the suo motu petition where it directed the Centre to release foreigner detainees who have been under detention for two years or more on certain terms on furnishing a bond in the sum of Rs. 5,000 with two sureties of the like sum of Indian citizens.

Once again, Qamar’ children moved the High Court seeking relief on the grounds of orders of the top court, where the Centre submitted that it was prepared to take a humanitarian approach for releasing the father of the petitioners, but Uttar Pradesh was not willing to do the same.

It had put on record UP government’s reply which said that Qamar is divorced and therefore, there is no justifiable ground for him to live in India and his release from the detention centre is not recommended.

Thereafter, the High Court said that the petitioners should approach the top court for relief.

Filed Under: India, News & Politics

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