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Published 31 Oct, 2015 06:46am

After Geeta, focus shifts to Pakistani boy stuck in India

KARACHI: Razia Begum shows a picture of her son Mohammad Ramazan on a mobile phone.—AFP

KARACHI: A Pakistani mother whose son has been stuck in India for years begged on Friday for them to be reunited after they made contact last month for the first time since 2008.

In a report mirroring that of Geeta, the deaf-mute Indian woman who returned to Delhi this week after spending more than 10 years trapped in Pakistan, Mohammad Ramazan wandered into India years ago without a passport and has been trapped there ever since.

Around six weeks ago his mother Razia Begum, who lives in Karachi, stumbled across his story and photograph on the Internet.

Now 15, Ramazan was found by the charity Childline in Bhopal, capital of Madhya Pradesh state, two years ago and has since been cared for by them.


Mother appeals to authorities to facilitate reunion


“When I heard about him, well... I cannot express in words my immense affection as a mother,” his mother said in an interview on Friday.

“For so many years he has been far from me. I earnestly desire that he should live with me now,” she said.

Ramazan’s parents divorced in 2004, and his father took him to Bangladesh in 2008 without his mother’s knowledge, she said.

Claiming he was abused by his father and stepmother, Ramazan ran away, straying into India where he wandered from town to town, sleeping and eating at shrines and railway stations before being picked up by Childline in Bhopal.

Childline director Archana Sahay told AFP this week that Ramazan spoke regularly with his mother since they made contact a month ago, and the pair had exchanged videos and photographs.

Ramazan’s identity has been established “beyond any doubt”, Ms Sahay said.

She said the Indian government had told the charity they were waiting for Pakistan to put in a formal request for his repatriation.

In Pakistan, the Ansar Burney Trust has requested the government’s help in bringing Ramazan home, the human rights organisation’s director Shagufta Burney said.

“Only a border is in between... there should be flexibility so that the child can reunite with his mother,” Ms Burny said. “When I speak to my mother, we both cry,” Ramazan told AFP in Bhopal.

“I want to go back to my home as soon as possible... I want to be with my mother. Just like Geeta came to India, I will be sent to Pakistan.”

Published in Dawn, October 31st, 2015

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