Deportation process on for Pakistani wives, children of ex-militants in J&K

Update: 2025-04-29 19:34 GMT

Srinagar: Authorities in Jammu and Kashmir on Tuesday have set the ball rolling for the deportation of 60 Pakistanis, one of them the mother of a policeman killed in a terror attack, officials said.

They were all collected from various districts and taken in buses to Punjab, where they will be handed over to the Pakistani authorities at the Wagah border, they said.

Most of the deportees are wives and children of ex-militants, who returned to the valley under the 2010 rehabilitation policy for former ultras.

Of them, 36 had been living in Srinagar, nine each in Baramulla and Kupwara, four in Budgam, and two in Shopian district, officials said.

Shameema Akhtar, the mother of Special Police Officer Mudasir Ahmad Shaikh, who died in May 2022 while fighting terrorists, is one of the deportees.

Mudasir was part of the team of undercover operatives of the Jammu and Kashmir Police, which intercepted a group of foreign terrorists.

“My sister-in-law is from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir which is our territory. Only Pakistanis should have been deported,” an apparently not happy Mohammad Younus, Mudasir’s uncle, told reporters.

After Mudasir’s death, Union Home Minister Amit Shah visited the family, so did the Lieutenant Governor, twice, he said.

“My bhabhi was 20 years old when she came here and has been living here for 45 years now. My appeal to (PM Narendra) Modi and Amit Shah is that they should not do it,” Younus said.

Kashmiri soldier’s Pakistani wife on way to deportation

Pakistani national who married a jawan of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) was sent back from Jammu for deportation to her country of origin, officials said on Tuesday. Minal Khan, who was accompanied by her husband Munir Khan, a resident of Gharota, left Jammu for the Wagah border. She had married him online, they said.

She urged the government to separate those who married in the country from their children. “We should be allowed to stay with the family,” Minal Khan said.

She, however, added, “We condemn the barbaric killings of innocents in the attack. They should be punished severely.”

India last week announced that all visas, barring a few under special categories, issued to Pakistani nationals will stand revoked on April 27, and they should leave the country by April 29.

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