Aman ki Asha and a daughter's appeal
Ajmer, 2011: Unable to walk on his own, Dr Chishty had to be carried to the court

Ajmer, 2011: Unable to walk on his own, Dr Chishty had to be carried to the court


In humanity's name: Aman ki Asha has been campaigning for clemency towards cross-border prisoners - young boys who stray across by mistake or in search of 'Bollywood', fishermen who cross the maritime border, families who have committed minor transgressions, long-term prisoners incarcerated for years on either side, until their story is taken up by human rights activists and media.... See articles compiled at our website www.amankiasha.com under the title 'In humanity's name'.

A campaign is building up in India for the release of an elderly retired Pakistani professor detained in India for over 19 years

By Beena Sarwar

An appeal to Aman ki Asha from the family of Dr S. M. Khaleel Chishty, retired Pakistani professor detained in India for nearly 19 years now is gaining momentum. Prominent Indians, film director Mahesh Bhatt, journalists Jatin Desai and Kuldip Nayyar, and activists Admiral Ramdas and Kavita Srivastava have appealed to the President of India as well as the Governor of Rajasthan for Dr Chishty's release on "humanitarian grounds". Indian Home Minister P. Chidambaram has requested case details, and the Indian media is picking up the case in a big way, with at least one TV channel (News 24) taking it up like a campaign.

The ball started rolling on April 4, 2011, when Dr Chishty's daughter Amna Chishty, emailed Aman ki Asha, a joint venture of the Jang Group of Pakistan and The Times of India Group about her father's case: "I am desperately trying to bring some attention to his plight . He is 80 years old, in failing health and currently in a prison hospital in India. I am attaching some details of his case hoping that your program can bring his plight to the forefront just like it campaigned for the Indian prisoner recently released by Pakistan... I believe that Aman ki Asha is the ideal platform to bring this case forward."

The same day, we forwarded Amna Chishty's appeal to several Indian journalists as well as an Indian Supreme Court judge who was on the bench that had penned the March 14, 2011 judgement quoting Faiz Ahmed Faiz, appealing to Pakistan to release "on humanitarian grounds" an Indian prisoner Gopal Dass who had served nearly 27 years in Pakistani prisons. The Indian Supreme Court's appeal, highlighted by Aman ki Asha, had led to the Pakistani government's widely applauded gesture of releasing the prisoner.

"I cannot interfere with a judicial proceeding, but will certainly try to help Dr Chishty get a pardon from the President of India under Article 72 of the Constitution of India," responded the learned judge who prefers not to be named but believes "it is a humanitarian duty of all of us to get Dr Chishty released as quickly as possible."

Thanks to the efforts of the Indian Supreme Court judge, Dr Chishty's family has finally been provided with the court documents as well as medical reports that they had not even seen so far.
Aman ki Asha also connected Dr Chishty's family with Kavita Srivastava of the People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL), who has been following Dr Chishty's case and went to meet him last week in Ajmer prison hospital (see Box 'Indian rights activists visit Dr Chishty').

Also in the loop now is former Acting Chief Justice of Patna High Court Nagendra Rai, a senior advocate in the Supreme Court of India and a member of the Indo-Pak Joint Judges Committee set up by the Governments of India and Pakistan with four members from each country.

The Indian judges on this Committee are proceeding to Pakistan to meet with their counterparts, including Justice Nasir Aslam Zahid, former Judge of Pakistan Supreme Court who had visited India last year as head of the delegation seeking release of Pakistani prisoners in Indian jails.

For the first time, Dr Chishty and his family members are allowing themselves some hope. This is their 'asha': that the elderly and ailing Dr Chishty, who has already spent nearly 19 years as a captive in India, be allowed to return home to spend his remaining days with his family in Pakistan.
"Time is something that my father does not have," as Amna Chishty says. "We just hope someone from either side is able to help bring him back 'alive'."

Wednesday, April 20, 2011




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55_7-03-2011_1.jpgThe News on Sunday Special Report: India Pakistan prisoners
We probably didn't need to do this Special Report. Newspaper stories don't matter when it comes to Indians in Pakistani jails and vice versa. In fact, 'vice versa' sums it up. We do to them what they do to us.

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