Recognising this, both New Delhi and Islamabad came to a compromise — allowing hundreds of Sikh pilgrims to cross over every year to attend the key festivals at these sacred sites. But the process for embarking on one of these pilgrimages is long, tedious and expensive. However, Islamabad took the initiative of building a corridor in the Narowal to allow Sikh pilgrims to cross over and visit the sacred sites in Kartarpur. Visitors will no longer have to go through the tedious hoops to secure a visa.
But the process still retains some qualifiers. Pilgrims have to submit their names well before they embark for the border, which New Delhi has to communicate to Islamabad 10 days in advance. Passports of visitors will be scanned, though they will not be stamped. And lastly, visitors will be required to pay a fee of $20 or around 1,500 Indian rupees. One hopes this corridor will create a ground to remove further barriers that exist between the two countries and return to a time when people identifying themselves of different faiths and nations coexisted peacefully.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 26th, 2019.
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