Dubai: Daughters of India-Pakistani couple await Indian passports


Dubai, Oct 14 (IANS): Two women who were born to an Indian man and his Pakistani wife have said that their lives have been in suspended animation of sort as they lack valid papers to visit their paternal home because the Indian government was yet to issue them passports.

They had applied for passports in 2011.

In an email to Gulf News, Mehrose.A, 28, and her sister who is a year younger, stated: "Our lives are stuck, we can't work or live a normal life" as she said they were kind of "stateless".

Narrating their story, Mehrose, who wrote the email, said their father is an Indian and mother a Pakistani, Gulf News reported.

She said the family had been living in Dubai for almost 60 years. "My grandfather, grandmother, and father are now dead and buried in Dubai. I have a younger sister and a younger brother, all three of us were born and brought up in Dubai."

She said their father died when she was around 15.

"When we were younger, we were allowed to visit India on our mother's passport. Our father was handling everything when he was alive. After he died, when we finished school we had to make new passports as the rules had changed."

She said the siblings were keen on getting Indian passports.

"Since my two younger siblings and I didn't have passports, we approached the Indian consulate for Indian passports, but they refused, saying the father didn't register us within one year of birth. After years of trying and requesting, they told us to bring sworn affidavits from the Pakistani Consulate that we are not applying for Pakistani passports, which we provided."

She said the case was finally accepted in 2011 and all relevant documents and forms were filled.

"The consulate sent them to India. By this time, I turned 19 and my sister was going to be 18-years-old. In India, our relatives were contacted, everything was checked and my brother was issued an Indian passport as he was still under 18. My sister and I were told to fill new forms, as by then we were over 18 years."

"The Indian Consulate sent the same to India and told us not to come to the consulate and will inform us by email. From 2011 up to now whenever we inquire, the Indian Consulate says they are still waiting for a reply from India."

"It has been more than nine years now. I'm now 28 and my sister will be 27-year-old. Our lives are stuck. We can't work or live a normal life as we are stateless." Speaking over the phone, she said the sisters could not move around freely as they had no valid documents. "Our education has been affected. We can't get married also."

During the past visa amnesties in the UAE, she said they had approached the mission and were hoping that their case would be expedited. "If they had issued our passports during the last amnesty, we could have legalised our visa status here." She claimed that having endorsed their names in their mother's passport while they were minors did not make them Pakistani citizens.

"So, we did not have to renounce any citizenship. We even got affidavits from Pakistani Consulate as wanted by the Indian Consulate just to register the case as a special case. It clearly states that we have never obtained Pakistani passports and never filed any application for it either."

"It is very annoying and frustrating. Our father and brother are Indians. Hence we request the Indian authorities to issue us the passports so our lives can move on. We just hope that the government here also allows us to rectify our status. We need a passport for that at the earliest," she said.

When contacted, the Indian Consulate in Dubai informed Gulf News that the women's request is still pending with the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) in India which is the nodal authority for granting citizenship.

"We understand it is a complex case and the humanitarian issues involved. However, as per the rules, it is not in our hands as they had already crossed 18 years when the application was accepted. We have sent a couple of reminders and we have made them apprised of the humanitarian aspect. We are yet to receive a response from the MHA. We are sending a fresh reminder to the ministry," said Neeraj Agrawal, consul for Press, Information and Culture.

 

  

Top Stories

Comment on this article

  • John Tauro, M'luru

    Thu, Oct 15 2020

    In GCC countries first time passports are issued on the basis of birth certificates in which the names and nationalities of parents are also mentioned. In this case they will have to get an NOC from the mother and a certificate from the Pakistan Consulate certifying that they have not been issued Pakistani passports. I wonder why this long delay.

    DisAgree Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • Rita, Germany

    Thu, Oct 15 2020

    Thats the biggest mistake their parents have done ,not to make a own passports soon after their birth.Now girls have struggle,and our Indian consulate is too not making them easy,or to say laying stones on their way .T

    hey applied in 2011.Now we are in 2020.so thats how our consulate is working.One puts the fault to other .who suffers ?They cant work,marry,travel.is it not a jail for them?I can appel to all,whatever your birth country is.Always make a own pass soon after the birth of a child.so that later they need not suffer like these.Ladys ,why dont you take a lawyer or a law maker to end this martyrium.?is it not possible?or approach a human rights consultation?Otherwise you have to apply for a UAE pass?wish you good luck.

    DisAgree [1] Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • S.R. Hegde, Bendoor Well. Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    The siblings or anybody for that matter know the worth of Pakis and Bangalis passports worth. They cannot travel to any country without any hassles. Shunned everywhere. The Indian PP is more powerful that these. No wonder the Rohingyas wanted asylum in India and not Paki or Bangla despite belonging to the same religion.

    DisAgree [14] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • Deshbhakt, Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    You are forgetting that their father was an Indian. In UAE, no matter how many years you stay in that country, the child will inherit the nationality from the father, there is not one chance that the child will get mother's nationality, even if the mother is a UAE citizen.

    As such, Pakistani nationality for them is out of question. Only if they had got their documents straight before they turned adults.

    DisAgree [4] Agree [14] Reply Report Abuse

  • Dev, Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    If Sushma Swaraj was approached by these people when she was minister in first Modi govt. then they would have got Indian papers.
    These days nobody cares for them like she did.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [17] Reply Report Abuse

  • Deshbhakt, Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    Dev,

    They are 28 & 29, their eighteenth year ended even before BJP came to power. What are you talking about ? Even if they approached Swaraj when she was in the Foreign Ministry, I'm sure NRC/CAA was on their mind all through else they would have been helped like how the HINDU mute girl in Pak was brought to India. Remember, these girls are not Hindus and the Indian law is different to them.

    I only wonder why their Indian father did not arrange their documents suitably.

    DisAgree [6] Agree [10] Reply Report Abuse

  • Harish Hegde, Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    Ma'am you better think twice. Do you want to get tortured?

    DisAgree [13] Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • NAVEEN, Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    Please explain how and why?

    DisAgree [3] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • Deshbhakt, Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    Not at a time when the Indian govt has 'by ORDINANCE' enacted CAA/NRC dear girls, not at a time when voting for a bill is not even considered important.

    I feel sorry for you both.

    DisAgree [9] Agree [11] Reply Report Abuse

  • Navneeth, Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    These girls have their brain in the right place . The would know which passport to opt for. Rohingyas are desperate to be in India than Pak and Bangladesh. Hope you can read between the lines,

    DisAgree [5] Agree [7] Reply Report Abuse

  • Deshbhakt, Mangalore

    Wed, Oct 14 2020

    No, they have no options like inky pinky ponky. They have only one way to get citizenship and that is through their (the) late father who was Indian and it's blocked now by your very adoring leader.

    DisAgree [4] Agree [6] Reply Report Abuse

  • John Tauro, M'luru

    Thu, Oct 15 2020

    What has your CAA got to do here? First their father and secondly the Indian Consulate are responsible for such a long delay. Still they are entitled for passports on the basis of their birth certificates. In the UAE first time passports are issued on the basis of birth certificates which mention nationalities of parents. The only requirement is a certificate from the Pakistani Consulate certifying that they were not issued Pakistani passports.

    DisAgree Agree [2] Reply Report Abuse


Leave a Comment

Title: Dubai: Daughters of India-Pakistani couple await Indian passports



You have 2000 characters left.

Disclaimer:

Please write your correct name and email address. Kindly do not post any personal, abusive, defamatory, infringing, obscene, indecent, discriminatory or unlawful or similar comments. Daijiworld.com will not be responsible for any defamatory message posted under this article.

Please note that sending false messages to insult, defame, intimidate, mislead or deceive people or to intentionally cause public disorder is punishable under law. It is obligatory on Daijiworld to provide the IP address and other details of senders of such comments, to the authority concerned upon request.

Hence, sending offensive comments using daijiworld will be purely at your own risk, and in no way will Daijiworld.com be held responsible.