Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Kartarpur: Pilgrim count up, Nov 24 to see 1,800 visitors

- Shishir Gupta letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The number of pilgrims and tourists from India who are travelling to the Kartarpur Sahib gurdwara across the border in Pakistan is gradually rising after a lukewarm initial response to the landmark initiative. According to people familiar with the developmen­t, as many as 1,800 people are scheduled to cross the border to visit Kartarpur on Sunday, November 24 — nearly three times the 671 people who were scheduled to visit on November 17.

Government data accessed by HT shows that the flow of pilgrims to Kartarpur Sahib is picking up on weekends and on specific Sikh religious days. A total of 562 Indian pilgrims and tourists visited Kartarpur Sahib on November 9, the day the corridor was launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi from the Indian side.

On the 550th birth anniversar­y of Guru Nanak Dev, on November

12, a total of 546 people from India made the trip.

The data shows that 229 people visited on Sunday, November 10; 122 on November 11; 279 on November 13; 241 on November 14; 161 on November 15, and 402 on November 16. The Union government — PM Modi and home minister Amit Shah in particular — have reached out to the Sikh community over the last few months. Apart from driving the creation of the Kartarpur corridor, their efforts include the removal of the “black lists” that barred several overseas Sikhs from visiting India, and the ministry of external affairs is ensuring that there is no delay in giving visas to Sikhs abroad. While both the Centre and the state government of Punjab have made all efforts to facilitate the Kartarpur visit for pilgrims and tourists, people familiar with the matter said that there were apprehensi­ons among some overseas visitors, particular­ly from the West, that getting a Pakistan stamp on their passports could create problems in the countries where they live.

For the Kartarpur visit, however, Pakistani immigratio­n only scans the passports of the visitors but does not stamp them.

The other issue, faced mainly by local Sikh pilgrims, is the $20 fee levied by Pakistan on all visitors despite repeated appeals by India to do away with the charge.

The people cited above indicated that the fee issue has been misused by Pakistan-promoted proscribed pro-khalistan groups such as Sikhs for Justice, which has put up posters in Kartarpur seeking a refund of the $20 levy for all those Sikh pilgrims who visited Kartarpur between November 9 and 12.

GOVT DATA ACCESSED BY HT SHOWS THAT THE FLOW OF PILGRIMS TO KARTARPUR SAHIB IS PICKING UP ON WEEKENDS

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