The Sunday Guardian

Apprehensi­on, relief, fear: The day Jadhav’s mother and wife met him

- SHEELA BHATT NEW DELHI

“Vo jinda hai (he is alive)”. That was the first thought that struck the mother and wife of Kulbhushan Jadhav when they saw him in Islamabad this week. This sense of relief was shared by both Indian diplomats in Islamabad, and the Indian government in Delhi. Amid all the hostility shown by Pakistan, when Avanti and Chetna Jadhav, the mother and wife of Indian prisoner Kulbhushan Jad- hav met him in Islamabad, the great suspense about his very existence was over and that in itself was an achievemen­t. For, no Indian official or any member of the Jadhav family had any contact with him or had any idea of where he was since his arrest was made public in March 2016.

Jadhav was arrested and tried on charges of espionage by Pakistan. He has been awarded the death sentence by a military court. India has stoutly denied the allegation­s and has been able to stall Jadhav’s execution by taking the case to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice at The Hague.

The Sunday Guardian has been able to put together the inside story of Kulbhushan Jadhav’s meeting with his mother and wife in Islamabad this week after talking to multiple sources inside and outside the government. When his mother Avanti and wife Chetna boarded the plane from Delhi to Dubai and then to Islamabad, both were restless and fearful of the unknown as neither of the two knew what laid in store for them. Mother Avanti stayed stronger of the two and took the lead in their journey to Pakistan. She was excited about meeting her son, but was also anxious about visiting a hostile country. As much as they wanted to meet Kulbhushan, they also wanted to return home safe.

The thought even crossed their mind what if Pakistan played mischief and presented a “bahurupia (looka- like)” before them. How would they know he was Kulbhushan?

The Indian establishm­ent’s biggest concern was that Avanti and Chetna should not be interrogat­ed, detained or arrested under any pretext whatsoever. The Indian government was completely distrustfu­l of the Pakistanis and, hence, through back channel negotiatio­ns, extracted a “sovereign guarantee” from Islamabad about the safety of the two women.

The two Marathi ladies got the shock of their lives right on the tarmac of the airport in Islamabad, soon after landing. Television cameras started following them, all the way to the Indian High Commission­er’s office. Reporters hounded them even at traffic signals. It was obvious that the Pakistan establishm­ent had laid a trap to stifle them by conducting a trial by media.

The arrangemen­ts that the Pakistanis had made for the meeting surprised both Avanti and Chetna, and even the Indian diplomats. The two women were stripped before the meeting and given ill fitting clothes to wear.

The much awaited meeting was more about tension than emotion. On seeing them Kulbhushan smiled, but looked to be under severe pressure throughout. The videos clearly show he had been restrained and was holding himself back. When he saw his mother and wife without bindis and mangalsutr­as, he asked in

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India