Two months late: India set to resume visa on arrival for senior citizens

Pakistanis over the age of 65 can now get a 45 day single-entry visa on arriving at Attari checkpost.


Web Desk April 05, 2013
The visa regime was due to be implemented on January 15, 2013, but was suspended by India. PHOTO: AFP/FILE

After they had suspended the new visa regime for 'visa-on-arrival' facility for Pakistani senior citizens on reciprocal basis two months ago, India on Friday resumed the facility, Times of India reported.

The visa regime – agreed upon by Pakistan and Indian governments last September - was due to be implemented in mid-January. It would have allowed senior Pakistani citizens of over 65 years of age to get a single entry 'visa-on-arrival' (VoA) at the Attari, Wagah checkpost. The visa would be valid for 45 days.

However, as tensions boiled on the Line of Control in which soldiers on both sides were killed in early January, India unilaterally decided not to implement the regime.

At the time Indian officials explained that the operationalisation of the VoA was delayed as several security agencies had sought clarifications on facilities to be offered to the Pakistani citizens without Indian sponsors.

COMMENTS (17)

Mukund | 10 years ago | Reply

@Naveen Reciprocity is not a prerequisite. This is about being human. India being bigger can afford to be a bit more generous on these small issues.

Agree completely. But people like you (and me) are in the minority, atleast among the netizens. A large section of upwardly mobile Indian yuppies look at the state as a corporate monolith, as if it's performance should be measured in terms of profit/loss and it has to be visible and instant. If reciprocity has an appearence of loss, shun it. Grab it, even if it brings no profit but an equivalence in negativity. This happens when one wants to become like one’s “enemy”. They may not admit it in public, but secretly they admire the "enemy"s ability to create mischief. India doesn't have to be generous per say, in foreign policy matters no one is. But India needs to be sagacious.

gp65 | 11 years ago | Reply

ET Please allow. Am responding to someone who has made many incorrect assumptions abot my thought process. @Hasan Mehmood: "ny neutral observer can confirm the self righteous strain in your comments implying all is well with India and all is wrong with Pakistan "

I comment on individual blogs on their merit. This being a Pakistani newspaper, many stories I comment here relate to Pakistan. I am certainly not of the opinion that everything is right with India. Whether female foeticide, or widespread hunger or open defecation - India has many big challenges. They just happen to be different challenges from the ones that Pakistan faces. So you have assumed how I feel but it is not accurate.

"For someone wanting Pakistanis to be kept at arm’s length you have the highest number of comments on each and every Pakistani issue irrespective of relevance to INDIA. "

In this blog, I was not saying keep Pakistanis away. I was simply saying concessions should be reciprocal. The 2 statements are quite different. In any case I was born and raised in Mumbai where my parents live even today and the reason I started reading Pakistani newspapers AFTER 26/11 is to understand what would drive people to do what they did. So in a sense my wariness of Pakistan and my interest in Pakistan are directly connected. Again it is Pakistani state institutions I am wary of not individual Pakistanis - many of whom I count as friends here in the US.

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