'Lost' Indian prisoner comes home
An Indian man released from a Pakistani prison after spending 35
years on death row has been reunited with his family in India.
Kashmir Singh, sentenced to death for spying in 1973, was released on
Monday. He was discovered by Ansar Burney, a social worker who tracks
people lost in Pakistan's jail system.
Hundreds of servicemen and civilians were imprisoned by India and
Pakistan during hostilities between the two sides in 1965 and 1971.
Mr Singh's wife and son were among hundreds of people who had
gathered to greet him at the Wagah border in the northern Indian state
of Punjab.
Mr Singh was re-united with his family after basic medical tests and
checks at the border.
"I am very, very happy and will escort him back to gurdwara [Sikh
temple] to pray," his wife, Paramjeet Singh said.
Ansar Burney discovered Mr Singh on a recent trip to a jail in Lahore
and persuaded Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf to revoke his death
sentence and order his release.
Mr Singh was a former policeman who had become a trader in electronic
goods. Speaking on Monday after his release from jail, he said: "I feel
better. I am happy." Mr Singh was arrested in the city of Rawalpindi in
1973 and convicted of spying.
Pakistan and India frequently arrest each other's citizens, often
accusing them of straying across the border - some are treated as spies.
Mr Burney is currently the government's caretaker minister for human
rights.
'Hell on Earth'
Mr Burney said last week that Mr Singh had been held in a condemned
prisoner's cell for most of the time since his conviction, and had
become mentally ill. He said that he was first informed about the case
several years ago by members of the Indian community in London. But he
was unable to locate Mr Singh, despite visiting more than 20 jails
across the country in connection with his campaign for prison reforms
and prisoners' rights. The minister said Mr Singh had not received a
single visitor or seen the open sky and, like other condemned prisoners,
was locked in an overcrowded cell for more than 23 hours a day, in
conditions which the minister described as "hell on Earth". |