Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
International

Afghan Sikh Widows Afraid To Return For Last Rites

IANS, 04 Jul, 2018 11:48 AM
    Manmeet Kaur, 41, was having tea with her two young daughters at their rented house in old Mahavir Nagar in New Delhi when a phone call from her brother-in-law shattered her world. 
     
     
    She was told her husband Anup Singh Wadhwa (42) had died in the Jalalabad suicide  attack. The body was identified by her 16-year-old son Dilpreet Singh from the gold ring and kara (bracelet) that he wore.
     
     
    Terrified, Manmeet Kaur refuses to return to Afghanistan for her husband’s last rites. “Going back to Kabul would be putting ourselves in the jaws of death,” she says. Her daughter Jasmeet Kaur,15, wants the Indian Government to grant visa to her brother left alone in Afghanistan.
     
     
    Another Sikh woman, who had arrived in Delhi barely a month ago with her children aged six and two, has also decided not to return for her husband’s cremation.
     
     
     “ I can’t endanger my children’s life,” she says.
     
     
    The grieving families held  13 akhand path at a Delhi gurdwara on Tuesday.
     
     
    Taramjit Singh, head of the Afghan Sikh community in India, lost his paternal uncle in the attack.  He says the Indian Government must take a compassionate view and grant permanent asylum to the families. 
     
     
    There are more than 5,000 Afghan Sikhs residing in West Delhi areas, including Old Mahavir Nagar.
     
     
    This locality houses 1984 Sikh massacre victims who have given shelter to the Afghan Sikhs. 
     
     
    Paramjit Kaur, whose family was wiped out in 1984,  says having undergone similar agony, they have decided to support the Afghan Sikhs. 
     
     
    Seventeen Sikhs were killed in the Jalalabad blast on July 1. Among them was poll candidate Avtar Singh Khalsa and civil society activist Rawail Singh. 
     
     
    More than 20 persons were injured. The attack was condemned by the UN.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    5 Kashmiris, Including Women, Beaten By Mob In Delhi Colony, Residents Say They Started It

    5 Kashmiris, Including Women, Beaten By Mob In Delhi Colony, Residents Say They Started It
    Four women and a youth hailing from Kashmir complained of assault by a mob of around 40 persons over a petty issue in the national capital, following which an FIR was lodged on Friday, police said.

    5 Kashmiris, Including Women, Beaten By Mob In Delhi Colony, Residents Say They Started It

    Indigo, Air Deccan Planes, 700 Metres Apart, Avert Mid-air Collision Over Dhaka

    A mid-air mishap was averted in the Dhaka airspace after an automatically generated warning alerted the pilots of IndiGo and Air Deccan planes, which came dangerously close to each other, allegedly breaching the mandatory separation limit, sources said.

    Indigo, Air Deccan Planes, 700 Metres Apart, Avert Mid-air Collision Over Dhaka

    Former Disney Employees Forego Lawsuit Against It Over H1B Visa abuse

    Former Disney Employees Forego Lawsuit Against It Over H1B Visa abuse
    A group of former Disney employees has dropped their lawsuit against the entertainment giant in which they accused it of discriminating against them by replacing them with H1B visa holders, mostly Indians.

    Former Disney Employees Forego Lawsuit Against It Over H1B Visa abuse

    Dabbawalas Of Mumbai To Mark Prince Harry-Meghan Markle's Wedding In A Special Way

    Dabbawalas Of Mumbai To Mark Prince Harry-Meghan Markle's Wedding In A Special Way
    The Dabbawalas ferry tiffins of home-made food to thousands of office-goers in the city every day. They also provide free food outside these three hospitals to the relatives of patients who come from far-away places.

    Dabbawalas Of Mumbai To Mark Prince Harry-Meghan Markle's Wedding In A Special Way

    Two Indian-Origin Men Charged With Securities, Wire Fraud In US

    Two Indian-Origin Men Charged With Securities, Wire Fraud In US
    Two Indian-origin men have been charged by federal authorities in the US with securities and wire fraud for inflating the value of private funds they advised by hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Two Indian-Origin Men Charged With Securities, Wire Fraud In US

    Indian Journalist Arrested In Australia On Charges Of People Smuggling

    Indian Journalist Arrested In Australia On Charges Of People Smuggling
      Rakesh Kumar Sharma, 46, was detained along with eight others Indian nationals by Australian Border Force (ABF) officers at the Brisbane Airport in March because his companions’ accreditation was not genuine, Brisbane Times reported.

    Indian Journalist Arrested In Australia On Charges Of People Smuggling