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Pakistani national living in Mumbai’s Antop Hill deported after spending 27 years in India

Pakistani national living in Mumbai’s Antop Hill deported after spending 27 years in India
Pakistani national staying in Mumbai's Antop Hill deported after spending 27 years in India

Siraj Khan is married with three children (Inset Picture Courtesy: Mumbai Mirror)

A 37-year-old Pakistani national, who was illegally staying in India since he was 10 years old, was deported to the neighbouring country earlier this week.

According to police, Siraj Khan, the Pakistani national, was staying in Mumbai’s Antop Hill area. He had also got married to an Indian woman some years ago. The couple have three children.

“Since all the cases against Khan were disposed of by the court and one case of violation of a detention order was withdrawn by the government, he was deported to Pakistan on March 12,” said Bhagwat Bansod, senior inspector at the Rafi Ahmed Kidwai Marg police station.

A police team took Khan to the Attari border at Amritsar in Punjab, from where he was deported after the completion of all the formalities at the foreign regional registration office, he added.

The Indian government had informed the Pakistani authorities about Khan’s deportation and after obtaining a no-objection certificate, he was handed over to them.

The police had also informed about Khan’s deportation to his wife Sajida Khan, who accompanied her husband till the Bandra Terminus in the western suburbs, from where he and the police team boarded the train for Amritsar on March 10.

Before Khan’s departure, his wife took selfies with him at the railway station, a police official said.

In June 2014, a division bench of the Bombay High Court had put a month’s stay on Khan’s deportation to Pakistan.

The court had then observed that since Khan’s application, seeking Indian citizenship, was pending before the Ministry of External Affairs, his detention must be stayed until the issue was decided.

Khan’s wife had filed the plea, seeking a stay on her husband’s deportation. She had also sought that Khan be released from detention as his family’s financial, physical and mental condition was worsening.

Khan’s wife approached the Bombay High Court again, seeking a stay on his deportation. However, a bench of justices R M Savant and S V Kotwal held that since Khan had been convicted under the Foreigners Act, his deportation was inevitable.

The court has kept the petition for hearing on March 20.

As per the plea of Khan’s wife, the Pakistani national had accidentally entered India in 1996 when he was 10 or 11 years of age. In 2009, however, he had tried to visit his native village in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).

When he approached the police for help to get to his village, he was asked to furnish legal documents, showing that he was a Pakistani national.

He was subsequently arrested by the Crime Branch for staying in India without a valid permission, according to the petition.

Khan was released after serving a six-month jail term, but in January 2014, a court here convicted him under the Foreigners Act, 1946 and ordered that he be deported to Pakistan. He had been in custody since his conviction.

A police official said it was now up to Khan to get a passport and visa and come to India or take his wife and children to Pakistan on valid documents.

With PTI inputs

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