Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
India

Another 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan' Tale Unfolds, Of Salman Ahmed Left Back In Pakistan

IANS, 08 Aug, 2015 01:44 PM
    Just like Gita, an Indian who lived in Pakistan for nearly 15 years before efforts were initiated to bring her back, another 'Bajrangi Bhaijaan' tale is unfolding as 24-year-old Salman Ahmed too needs India's assistance to get back home - after over two decades.
     
    "Thank you Sushma Swaraj for helping Gita," Pakistani human rights activist Ansar Burney, who has played a pivotal role in pursuing Gita's case with the Indian government, told IANS on Saturday, a day when the Indian external affairs minister said all efforts were being made to ensure Gita reaches home quick.
     
    "But it is my earnest request to her that she should help Salman Ahmed also. There should not be any discrimination on the basis of religion that Gita, a Hindu, received help, but Salman, a Muslim, did not," he said.
     
    In "Bajrangi Bhaijaan", actor Salman Khan takes a mute Pakistani girl lost in India back to her country. The movie became an instant hit in both the countries.
     
    Born to an Indian father and a Pakistani mother, Salman Ahmed was two-years-old when his parents visited Pakistan's Karachi city in 1994, Burney said.
     
    But when it was time to return to India after their visa expired, Salman Ahmed became seriously ill and his mother, Salma Viqar, had no option but to leave him at his maternal grandparents care in Pakistan.
     
    The mother of seven (Salman is her fifth child) returned to her large family in Aligarh in Uttar Pradesh.
     
    "With several small children to take care of and the death of parents-in-law and failing health of her husband Hafiz Viqar Ahmad, diagnosed with complications, she found it hard to plan a trip to Pakistan to bring her son back.
     
    "Salman, who has spent over two decades in Pakistan, wants to return to his parents. He is unable to work in Pakistan and lives with the fear of being discovered as an 'illegal' resident," Burney, Pakistan's former federal minister for human rights who now runs Ansar Burney Trust International, said.
     
    Salman Ahmed's family wrote to the Indian High Commission in Islamabad in March 2013, and sought aid in getting their son back. In 2012, they had sent a fax to the ministry of external affairs, explaining the circumstances under which their son came to live in Pakistan.
     
    On April 5th this year, the family also reached out to Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav, but is yet to get a response from any of them.
     
    Burney said the parents have been running from pillar to post to get Salman Ahmed, 24, back home.
     
    "Salman has no documents to show he is either a citizen of Pakistan or of India. Pakistan says his father holds an Indian passport, so he is technically Indian. India says he has been living in Pakistan for 22 years, it is best that he gets a Pakistani passport," he said. 
     
    The hapless couple approached officials in Aligarh with copies of their ration card and passport, which show Salman Ahmed as their son. They also have his birth certificate. Officials, they say, plead helplessness, Burney said. 
     

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles
    Delhi Transport Minister Gopal Rai on Monday said the Delhi transport department in collaboration with the transport departments of Uttar Pradesh and Haryana will conduct a drive against overloaded vehicles from April 15.

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good
    I have always found it tedious to answer the question: "Which is your hometown?" Not because I am a daughter of an army officer or belong to a family of travellers, but because "I was born in Srinagar and was brought up in Jammu." 

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?
    In early 2000, Ratan Tata, now the Tata Group's chairman emeritus, told journalists that he wanted to create an affordable four-wheeler for two-wheeler users who couldn't afford a car. That vision was developed into the Tata Nano.

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation
    Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi's long "leave of absence" appears to have accentuated the debate in the Congress on his possible elevation with clear differences among party leaders on the issue. 

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena
    Voting rights of Muslims should be revoked to stop vote-bank politics, Shiv Sena leader Sanjay Raut has said in an article slamming AIMIM leaders Asaduddin and Akbaruddin Owaisi for polarising the community.

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena

    Congress Dares Modi To Declassify Documents On Netaji

    Congress Dares Modi To Declassify Documents On Netaji
    The Congress on Sunday termed the news reports suggesting snooping of family of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose "motivated news plants based on selected and mischievous leaks" and dared Prime Minister Narendra Modi to declassify all documents relating to the freedom fighter.

    Congress Dares Modi To Declassify Documents On Netaji