2 Pakistani minors held in IIOJK released

From Abid Usman

LAHORE: The Juvenile Justice Board in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) ordered the immediate release of two Pakistani children on Friday after the minors crossed the Line of Control (LoC). The two children, 14-year-old Asmad Ali and 16-year-old Khayyam Maqsood, had accidentally crossed the LoC and are now lodged in a juvenile center in the Poonch district of occupied Kashmir.
The board declared that the children had committed a crime by illegally crossing the border. However, ordered their release due to them being minors. The relevant Indian authorities were directed to send back the two Pakistani minors after fulfilling the legal requirements.
The two children were also directed to submit an affidavit declaring to the board that they would not repeat their mistake in the future.
Asmad Ali is a resident of Rawal Kot, Azad Kashmir, and crossed the LoC on November 28 last year while chasing his pet pigeons. The 14-year old’s family had appealed to the Pakistani and Indian prime ministers for his release and return home.
The Indian government had granted consular access to the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi in March this year, after which the process of verifying the child’s citizenship was initiated – which has since been completed.
Khayyam Maqsood, on the other hand, belongs to the Poonch district of Azad Kashmir and crossed the LoC by mistake on 24 August last year where he was arrested by the Indian Army. The 16-year-old is now to be released after a year.
While the juvenile justice board has ordered the release of the two minors, no details have emerged pertaining to their return home by either the Indian authorities or the Pakistani High Commission in Delhi.
Earlier in March, a differently-abled teenager, 19-year-old Waseem Tanveer, who had mistakenly crossed into IIOJK in 2013 had been reunited with his family by the efforts of the Edhi Foundation.
Being unable to talk or hear, he could not describe his identity to the Indians, said an Edhi spokesperson.
He had added that an NGO from Indian Punjab had contacted Faisal Edhi and described the child, telling him that he could recognize buildings and personalities.