Hope lingers for relatives of 1965 POWs
ISLAMABAD:
Relatives of soldiers imprisoned by India during the 1965 war are still waiting for the return of their loved ones. Staging a sit-in outside the National Press Club Islamabad on Thursday, these relatives believe that some 18 war prisoners remain alive in Indian jails even after a passage of 45 years.
The brother and nephew of an imprisoned soldier, Muhammad Ayub from Gujar Khan, said he belonged to the Baloch Regiment of Pakistan Army and went missing in 1965 from the Chamb Jorian Sector.
Muhammad Naseer, brother of Lance Naiek Abdul Rehman, said his brother was in the FF Unit of Pakistan Army and went missing from Chamb Jorian Section too.
The protestors said that they had received a letter from the army one month after the war stating that their loved ones had gone missing. Another letter on May 24, 1966 stated that the relatives were martyred.
But one of the recently released prisoner from an Indian jail said on a TV channel five months ago that 18 Pakistani prisoners of 1965 war were in different Indian jails. Upon this, Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry had directed the Interior Ministry to gather information about the war prisoners, after which a letter was sent to the Pakistan High Commission in India. The letter received no response. “We sent our case to Senate Standing Committee on Interior but nothing has been done as yet,” one of the protestors said.
They urged the president, prime minister, United Nations Organisation, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other human right organisations to retrieve the prisoners of war.
Published in the Express Tribune, June 4th, 2010.
Relatives of soldiers imprisoned by India during the 1965 war are still waiting for the return of their loved ones. Staging a sit-in outside the National Press Club Islamabad on Thursday, these relatives believe that some 18 war prisoners remain alive in Indian jails even after a passage of 45 years.
The brother and nephew of an imprisoned soldier, Muhammad Ayub from Gujar Khan, said he belonged to the Baloch Regiment of Pakistan Army and went missing in 1965 from the Chamb Jorian Sector.
Muhammad Naseer, brother of Lance Naiek Abdul Rehman, said his brother was in the FF Unit of Pakistan Army and went missing from Chamb Jorian Section too.
The protestors said that they had received a letter from the army one month after the war stating that their loved ones had gone missing. Another letter on May 24, 1966 stated that the relatives were martyred.
But one of the recently released prisoner from an Indian jail said on a TV channel five months ago that 18 Pakistani prisoners of 1965 war were in different Indian jails. Upon this, Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry had directed the Interior Ministry to gather information about the war prisoners, after which a letter was sent to the Pakistan High Commission in India. The letter received no response. “We sent our case to Senate Standing Committee on Interior but nothing has been done as yet,” one of the protestors said.
They urged the president, prime minister, United Nations Organisation, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other human right organisations to retrieve the prisoners of war.
Published in the Express Tribune, June 4th, 2010.