The Asian Age

India slams Pak curbs on envoy’s visit to gurdwara

Deputy envoy summoned in Delhi ◗

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India summons Pakistani envoy, lodges strong protest for not allowing Indian envoy to visit Gurdwara Panja Sahib in Pakistan to meet visiting Indian pilgrims

◗ This is the second incident in two months of Pakistan preventing Indian envoy from visiting the holy shrine

◗ Pak denies that Indian envoy was not given access to the religious site

India on Saturday summoned Pakistan’s deputy high commission­er here and lodged a strong protest over denial of permission to the Indian high commission­er in Islamabad and other consular officials to visit Gurdwara Panja Sahib in Pakistan and meet visiting Indian pilgrims.

It was conveyed to Pakistan that preventing Indian high commission officials from dischargin­g their consular responsibi­lities was in violation of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations of 1961, and the 1974 Pakistan- India Protocol on Visits to Religious Shrines.

The ministry of external affairs ( MEA), in a statement, said that Pakistan’s deputy high commission­er Syed Haider Shah was summoned and a strong protest was lodged over the denial of access to Indian high commission­er Ajay Bisaria and consular officials on Saturday to visiting Indian pilgrims at Gurdwara Panja Sahib in Pakistan’s Punjab province.

Mr Bisaria, accompanie­d by his wife, had to return to Islamabad without visiting the gurdwara

at Hasan Abdal near Rawalpindi despite having obtained permission­s for the visit in advance.

A strong protest was also registered by the Indian high commission in Islamabad, the ministry said.

“Concerns have also been conveyed at repeated attempts by entities in Pakistan to extend support to secessioni­st movements in India and incite Indian pilgrims, and Pakistan authoritie­s were asked to ensure that no such activity is carried out from Pakistan soil,” it said.

Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee

( SGPC), which organised the Indian pilgrims’ visit to Pakistan, expressed dismay over the incident. It questioned why Mr Bisaria was not allowed to meet the visitors despite the fact that some pilgrims from India asked Pakistan organisers to facilitate a meeting with Indian high commission­er and other high commission officials.

This is the second incident in two months of Pakistan preventing the Indian high commission­er from meeting visiting pilgrims from India. Indian diplomats and consular teams were denied access to around 1,800 Sikh devotees who arrived in Pakistan on April 12 at Wagah railway station ahead of visiting religious shrines. The consular team was also stopped from visiting Gurdwara Panja Sahib on April 14 to meet Indian pilgrims. In the past, the standard practice has been that the Indian high commission’s consular team is attached with visiting pilgrims to perform consular and protocol duties like helping out in medical or family emergencie­s. Meanwhile, Pakistan media reports claimed that Islamabad has dismissed the Indian claim that Mr Bisaria was denied access to the Sikh religious site.

Pakistan foreign office spokesman Mohammad Faisal, in a statement, said, Sikh pilgrims were protesting against maltreatme­nt in India and release of controvers­ial movies the Indian high commission was informed about the heightened pilgrim sentiments and he agreed to cancel his visit due to this concern, Mr Faisal said.

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