Long road home: Hamid Nihal Ansari's return
India and Pakistan should adopt a more humane approach to each other’s prisoners
The return to India of Hamid Nihal Ansari, an engineer from
Mumbai who spent six years in a Pakistani prison, is cause for cheer on the
otherwise bleak landscape of India-Pakistan relations. The plight of the young
man, who had crossed over into Pakistan from Afghanistan in 2012 on a mission
to save a woman he had befriended online and been arrested for espionage, had
caught public attention in both countries. Subsequent investigations proved his
innocence on all charges other than entering Pakistan illegally, but even so,
the authorities there put him through a trial in a military court. In December
2015, the court sentenced him to three years in prison. All through his ordeal,
Mr. Ansari’s parents kept alive the struggle to bring him back, without letting
the emotional and financial costs deter them. To its credit, the Ministry of
External Affairs applied sustained diplomatic pressure on Islamabad, first to
demand information on Mr. Ansari’s whereabouts and then for a fair trial and
consular access, which was never granted. The Government of Pakistan must also
be commended for expediting Mr. Ansari’s release after he completed his
sentence on December 15, although it had received another month from a Peshawar
court to finish the formalities. Above all, credit goes to citizens’ groups in
both countries that helped the family, particularly lawyers and human rights
activists in Pakistan who worked pro bono to ensure Mr. Ansari’s release.
Given the downturn in bilateral relations, further complicated by the
international case India is pursuing against Pakistan over the conviction of
Kulbhushan Jadhav, and instances of prisoners like Sarabjit Singh dying in
Pakistani jails, it is nothing short of a miracle that Mr. Ansari has returned
home safe and sound. New Delhi would do well to acknowledge the Imran Khan
government’s gesture in releasing him. Both India and Pakistan must dedicate
themselves to freeing hundreds of other prisoners who remain in each other’s
jails, many of whom have completed their sentences but await long processes of
identification and repatriation. According to government figures, Pakistan
holds 471 Indian prisoners while India holds 357 Pakistani prisoners, a large
number of them fishermen who inadvertently trespassed into each other’s waters.
The two countries must also revive the biannual meetings of the Joint Judicial
Committee on Prisoners as agreed to a decade ago; the committee has not met
since 2013. Its last recommendations, that women and children as well as
prisoners with mental health issues be sent back to their countries on
humanitarian grounds, are yet to be implemented. There is little to be gained
by holding these prisoners hostage to bitter bilateral ties and prolonging the
misery of their impoverished families. There needs to be a more humane
approach.
Courtesy: The
Hindu
Bleak (adjective) – unpromising, unfavourable, disadvantageous (situation).
Landscape (noun) – the distinctive features of a field of activity.
Plight (noun) – difficult situation, trouble/difficulty, quandary.
Befriend (verb) – make friends with, support/back, stand by.
Espionage (noun) – spying, undercover work, infiltration/counter-intelligence.
Ordeal (noun) – painful experience, unpleasant experience, difficulty.
Keep alive (phrasal verb) – nurse, perpetuate, keep going/continue/sustain.
Deter (verb) – prevent, stop, avert.
To one’s credit (phrase) -used to mention that someone deserves praise/admiration.
Sustained (adjective) – continuous, uninterrupted, constant.
Whereabouts (noun) – location, position, situation.
Consular (adjective) – relating to the consul or consulate in a foreign city.
Commend (verb) – admire, honour, praise.
Expedite (verb) – speed up, accelerate, hurry.
Pro bono (adjective) – free, without charge, for nothing.
Downturn (noun) – setback, upset/blow, decline (in business activity).
Conviction (noun) – declaration/pronouncement of guilt, sentence, judgement.
Nothing short of (phrase) – almost; little less than.
Repatriation (noun) – the act of sending people to their own country.
Inadvertently (adverb) – accidentally, unintentionally; unwittingly.
Trespass (verb) – encroach on, invade, infringe.
Hold hostage (phrase) – keep someone as a hostage.
Prolong (verb) – lengthen, extend, protract.
Impoverished (adjective)
– weakened, exhausted; poor/poverty-stricken.
Note: All
meanings took from Oxforddictionaries.com and Google.co.in only.
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