India visit cut short, Pak citizens condemn Pahalgam attack but say 'spare common people'
India has announced that all visas issued to Pakistani nationals will be revoked from 27 April and advised Indians residing in Pakistan to return home at the earliest.
PTI
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Pakistani nationals arrive at the Integrated Check Post at the Attari-Wagah border to move to their country, near Amritsar on Saturday (PTI)
Chandigarh, 26 April
Ensure exemplary punishment
for the Pahalgam terror attack perpetrators but spare the regular folks from
bearing the brunt. That was the common refrain among Pakistani visitors at the
Attari-Wagah land route racing to exit India ahead of a short deadline.
India
has announced that all visas issued to Pakistani nationals will be revoked from 27 April and advised Indians residing in Pakistan to return home at the
earliest, as tensions between the two countries escalated over the Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 people, mostly tourists.
Medical
visas issued to Pakistani nationals are valid till 29 April.
Most
of the Pakistani nationals exiting through the told PTI that they had come to
meet their kin in India. Some were here to attend weddings but now have to rush
back home without participating.
"It
was my niece's wedding today. I came after 10 years but still couldn't attend
the ceremony," said a visibly upset Baskari, a Karachi resident who had
come to Uttar Pradesh's Saharanpur along with her husband.
Her
husband Mohd Rasheed said that they arrived in India on April 10 on a 45-day
visa. "My wife was born in India and my in-laws live here. The wedding was
to take place in Saharanpur district today. Police came to our relative's home
and asked us to leave immediately," he said.
His
wife said, "It is saddening to leave on the day of the wedding. Peace
should prevail between the two nations."
"Whatever
happened in Pahalgam is wrong. Those behind it should be severely punished, but
the common people should not have to face the brunt. People carrying out such
acts have nothing to do with religion. Common people on both sides love each
other. A handful of terrorists spoil the atmosphere," Rasheed said.
Another
Pakistani national heading back home said he was in India for his mother's
treatment and was lucky enough that it was over just a couple of days ago.
Bali
Ram from Ghotki in Pakistan's northern Sindh said he was visiting his three
daughters in Raipur when the news of the attack broke. "I came on 5 April but now have to rush back. Those who carried out the act should be punished,
but what in the fault of innocent tourists?"
Daulat
from Karachi was in Jodhpur on a 45-day visa for a wedding. "Whatever
happened (in Pahalgam) is not good. This should not have happened," she
said while dragging a few trolley suitcases towards the exit gate.
Muzammil
strongly condemned the 22 April terrorist attack, saying that "they should
be hanged". An elderly man from Rawalpindi said he had come to Lucknow for
a kin's wedding but had to cut short the trip now.
On
Friday, Union Home Minister Amit Shah called up the chief ministers of all the
states and asked them to ensure that no Pakistani stays in India beyond the deadline set for leaving the country.
After
Shah's telephonic conversations with the chief ministers, Union Home Secretary
Govind Mohan held a video conference with the chief secretaries of all the
states and asked them to ensure that all Pakistani nationals whose visas were
revoked must leave India by the fixed deadline.
As
many as 229 Pakistani nationals visiting India have returned home so far
through the Attari-Wagah land route after the Centre set the deadline. A total
of 392 Indian nationals visiting the neighbouring nation also returned,
officials said.
The already strained relations between India and Pakistan nosedived further after the Pahalgam terror attack, with New Delhi announcing a raft of retaliatory steps, including the cancellation of visas, and Islamabad hitting back with a string of tit-for-tat measures.
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