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41 Indians became Pakistanis last year. Why do they do it? What are the obstacles?

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41 Indians became Pakistanis last year. Why do they do it? What are the obstacles?​


According to official data, the number of Indians who received Pakistani citizenship was up from zero in 2019, to 7 in 2020 and 41 in 2021. India does not allow for dual citizenship.​

PIA KRISHNANKUTTY
2 August, 2022 08:59 am IST

India-Pakistan ties have hit new lows in the past few years | PTI


India-Pakistan ties have hit new lows in the past few years | PTI
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New Delhi: In 2015, Padmini Rathore of the erstwhile royal family of Kanota in Rajasthan was inundated with calls from journalists seeking to cover her cross-border wedding with Kunwar Karni Singh Sodha of the Amarkot royal family from Pakistan’s Sindh.

‘Pakistani boy, Indian girl and a royal wedding in Jaipur’ and ‘A wedding beyond borders’ were some of the headlines splashed across Indian news portals that year.

Seven years on, Padmini is grappling with the grimy bureaucratic misery that awaits those who marry across what is often called the world’s most dangerous border.

The number of Indians who received Pakistani citizenship has inched up, from zero in 2019, to 7 in 2020 and 41 in 2021, government data revealed last month. Padmini’s story helps understand why some Indians have chosen to become citizens of Pakistan, as well as the obstacles that confront them.

Unlike some other countries, India does not allow for dual citizenship, which means that all Indian nationals who acquire a foreign nationality must legally renounce their Indian citizenship.


Like most Indians who apply for Pakistani citizenship, 34-year-old Padmini did so for marital purpose.

“I married Kunwar Karni Singh in 2015. We have a five-year-old son who has a Pakistani passport. I’m the only one in our family who doesn’t have Pakistani citizenship which makes travelling within Pakistan a hassle. Since I’m still an Indian national, I can’t travel from one Pakistani city to another without a visa which usually takes 15-20 days to process,” she told ThePrint.

Travelling abroad is also an issue as she is allowed only two re-entries into Pakistan a year.

“Before the 2019 Pulwama attack, they were allowing four re-entries a year which was doable. Now, with only two re-entries, we can’t take many family trips abroad,” explained Padmini.

The situation has led to financial and logistical difficulties. “If I want to buy a piece of land in Pakistan, I have to register it under my husband’s name. Until I get citizenship, I can’t open a bank account or get my hands on a CNIC card,” she told ThePrint.

Similar to India’s Aadhaar card, Pakistan’s Computerised National Identity Card (CNIC) is required for close to everything there — from opening a bank account and purchasing vehicles or land, to obtaining a SIM card.


Also Read: Pakistan doesn’t give citizenship on religion, but India is dangerously tilting towards it

‘Repeated downgrading of India-Pak ties could be a factor’

Padmini suspects that repeated downgrading of India-Pakistan ties over the last decade could be a factor in the delay of her citizenship application.

“Many of the women who have married into my husband’s family were Indians — my mother-in-law, aunt-in-law, grandmother-in-law. In their time, Pakistani citizenship was granted within weeks,” she told ThePrint.

“I suspect mine is taking longer because of factors out of my control. In the last decade, India-Pakistan relations have been downgraded multiple times with the Pulwama attack, the Balakot strike, and the scrapping of Article 370 in Jammu & Kashmir. Maybe both sides have become more cautious in issuing citizenship to each other’s people.”

Meanwhile, there has been no explanation for the recent uptick in grant of Pakistani citizenship to Indians.

Former foreign secretary Kanwal Sibal suggests it might have to do with the clearance of a backlog of applications as well as the rise in the number of Indian-Pakistani couples in the Gulf region.

“The slight increase in the number of Indians receiving Pakistani citizenship over the last two-three years may actually be a reflection of the clearing of a backlog of applications. As we know, Indians applying for Pakistani citizenship usually wait a long time. Another factor may be the Gulf region. Over the last decade or so, it has become a popular confluence of Indians and Pakistanis alike. It’s not uncommon for couples to meet there and then settle down in either India or Pakistan,” Sibal told ThePrint.

Also Read: Siachen dispute needs India and Pakistan to revisit Karachi Ceasefire Agreement

Lucky but tough experience

Among the few who did manage to get a Pakistani citizenship is 46-year-old Samira Ijlal, who had applied in 1999.

“My husband and I got married in January 1999 and I got my Pakistani citizenship in December. The process took about nine months from the start of application, which is rare. People usually wait years,” she told ThePrint.

Samira and her husband lived in Bangladesh from 2003 to 2017, which, she says, made it easier for them to obtain travel permits to India as compared to when they re-settled in Karachi.

“My husband and I had work permits in Bangladesh. I worked in a merchandise exporting house in Dhaka. We used to frequently visit India for business trips and to meet my family. Getting Indian visas was quite easy while we were living in Bangladesh. The trouble began when we returned to Karachi in 2017,” she said.

Acquiring Pakistani citizenship, though creates its own problems. The last time Samira visited India was in January 2019 to attend a wedding.

“I had applied for a visa to visit Hyderabad, Delhi and Lucknow, but was only permitted to travel to Hyderabad and Lucknow. The visa took a long time to come, about three-four months. I suspect they didn’t allow me to go to Delhi because security is tight during Republic Day preparations,” she explained.

Samira was also unable to attend her mother’s funeral in September 2020 as India and Pakistan were not issuing visas during the Covid pandemic.

(Edited by Nida Fatima Siddiqui)

 
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Only 41???

Seriously??

I thought with the religious problems in India, the number at the minimum will be around hundreds of thousands.

Not to mention India is among the world's biggest people exodus.
 
Only 41???

Seriously??

I thought with the religious problems in India, the number at the minimum will be around hundreds of thousands.

Not to mention India is among the world's biggest people exodus.
pakistan wont give that many visa`s if th need ever became that high, which i dont think it will....we already have a high population.
 
@SD 10

pakistan wont give that many visa`s if the need ever became that high,

Pakistan should- it was created as a refuge for all of subcontinents Muslims- although I hope there is no need for Muslims to migrate from BD/IND to PAK.

we already have a high population.

Brofessor sb (@RiazHaq) says a large population is a good thing if they have good skills etc. Any emigrants from India will be a relatively skilled lot.

Regards
 
Only 41???

Seriously??

I thought with the religious problems in India, the number at the minimum will be around hundreds of thousands.

Not to mention India is among the world's biggest people exodus.
Indian population is in exodus in 100,000 or more on yearly basis. About 25 million people of indian origin live abroad. This has happened in a little over 5 decades. They are scattered all over the world, including China. Even millionaires are moving out in droves because they can easily get citizenship of developed nations. I sure it is same in your country.
 
@SD 10

pakistan wont give that many visa`s if the need ever became that high,

Pakistan should- it was created as a refuge for all of subcontinents Muslims- although I hope there is no need for Muslims to migrate from BD/IND to PAK.

we already have a high population.

Brofessor sb (@RiazHaq) says a large population is a good thing if they have good skills etc. Any emigrants from India will be a relatively skilled lot.

Regards
large population is a very bad thing especially a large growth rate, Pakistan cant sustain that. its the need of the time to drastically cut down the growth rate, half of our problems will go away with that!
 
41 Indians became Pakistanis last year. Why do they do it? What are the obstacles?
41 Indians. How many Pakistanis leave Pakistan for a better life in the west each year again?
 
It’s scientifically proved on PDF that India kills thousands of Muslims every day. I thought millions of Indian Muslims would be migrating to Pakistan every year.

Only 41, and that too for marriage purposes? Not a single Muslim left for so called “religious oppression” prevailing in India ???

Mehhhhh….
 
It’s scientifically proved on PDF that India kills thousands of Muslims every day. I thought millions of Indian Muslims would be migrating to Pakistan every year.

Only 41, and that too for marriage purposes? Not a single Muslim left for so called “religious oppression” prevailing in India ???

Mehhhhh….

Well you can keep yourself happy with this chutya logic that there is no religious persecution in India and it is a uptopia

Tu khush reh bas
 
Well you can keep yourself happy with this chutya logic that there is no religious persecution in India and it is a uptopia

Tu khush reh bas
Well, PDF Paks keep themselves happy with the Chutya logic of Indian Muslims getting killed in thousands everyday, so yeah why not.

Tum bhi khush raho :)
 
Well, PDF Paks keep themselves happy with the Chutya logic of Indian Muslims getting killed in thousands everyday, so yeah why not.

Tum bhi khush raho :)

No Pakistani says that thousands are being killed daily

Tu khush reh. Chutya reh laikin khush reh

It's a mental illness among some members here.

Ajeeb si cheezain aati rehti hain PDF par bharat mata sai

Kia kar saktai hain
 
Only 41???

Seriously??

I thought with the religious problems in India, the number at the minimum will be around hundreds of thousands.

Not to mention India is among the world's biggest people exodus.
Those 41 also not bcz of religious problem, they got it for marriage purpose. Veer-Zara movie is responsible for this.

Well you can keep yourself happy with this chutya logic that there is no religious persecution in India and it is a uptopia

Tu khush reh bas
Its in media and politics only and honestly some people gets influenced and become violent, Moslty muslims.
If you see ground reality, common people doesn't care much. They are busy with their own life.
If you spend a week in India you will get it how much propaganda you fed.
 
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No Pakistani says that thousands are being killed daily

Tu khush reh. Chutya reh laikin khush reh



Ajeeb si cheezain aati rehti hain PDF par bharat mata sai

Kia kar saktai hain
Okay sir , if you choose to be a chutya, who am I to stop you
Those 41 also not bcz of religious problem, they got it for marriage purpose. Veer-Zara movie is responsible for this.
It must be a sad day for PDF as not a single Indian Muslim migrated to Pakistan because of “religious oppression”
I don’t know how they gonna deal with this reality now :(
 
Okay sir , if you choose to be a chutya, who am I to stop you

Tu khush reh. Mazai kar

Its in media and politics only and honestly some people gets influenced and become violent, Moslty muslims.
If you see ground reality, common people doesn't care much. They are busy with their own life.
If you spend a week in India you will get it how much propaganda you fed.

Sabhi baat hai

Tu bhi khush reh. Chill kar
 

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