Sikh family of four go missing in Pakistan

Victims were on 10-day visit to celebrate Baisakhi


Abdul Manan April 24, 2015
Sikh pilgrims pay their respects at Gurdwara Sri Panja Sahib in Hassanabdal on the occasion of Baisakhi festival. PHOTO: APP

ISLAMABAD: Four members of a visiting Sikh family from India have gone missing in what is being termed as the first-ever incident of its kind in Pakistan, officials said on Thursday.

Authorities are concerned that the incident may spark tension between the two countries.

Around 2,000 Sikh pilgrims – 1,717 of them from India – were in Pakistan on a 10-day visit to celebrate Baisakhi.

The four-member family from the village of Sandhawala in Faridkot were among those making the pilgrimage to celebrate Baisakhi in Pakistan on April 11. All the other pilgrims except them have returned home.

The Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) – a government body responsible for arranging accommodation and security for Sikh pilgrims as well as ensuring their safe return – confirmed that the family of four was missing.

Together with the Pakistan Sikh Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee, the board facilitates Sikh pilgrims visiting Pakistan on their religious festivals. ETPB Additional Secretary Shrine Khalid Ali said the Pakistani government was trying to trace the missing family.

The missing family has been identified as 38-year-old Sunil Singh, his 27-year-old wife Sunita and their children: nine-year-old daughter Huma Kaur and 10-year-old son Umer Singh.

Harpal Singh Bhullar, president of the Bhai Mardana Yadgari Kirtan Darbar Society (BMYKDS), said this year the Pakistani government had issued 170 visas to the organisation, including Sunil and his family.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 24th, 2015.

COMMENTS (4)

J. | 9 years ago | Reply The most probable things is that if you stray to some restricted and unstable areas such as areas other than urban and semiurban bordering major cities then there are chances that god forbids you might get kidnapped
wb | 9 years ago | Reply Indian embassy must follow this up very keenly. We don't want our citizens to be hostages of some hostile elements. Their safe return is very important.
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