Login Register
Follow Us

He'd not have died this brutally, had his visa come earlier: Wife of Sikh man killed in Kabul attack

Was trying to get a visa ever since the Taliban took over Afghanistan, said his wife Pal Kaur living in Delhi's Tilak Nagar

Show comments

New Delhi, June 19

For Sawinder Singh, Kabul no longer felt home after the Taliban took over the Afghanistan capital last year. He ran a small 'paan' shop there, lived in a gurudwara, but always wanted to come to Delhi where his family lives.

He had applied for an e-visa. It was approved on Sunday. But the fear that gripped his wife for months had precipitated into reality a day before. The 60-something would never be home! Gurudwara Karte Parwan on Saturday became the latest target of attack on the minority communities' places of worship in Afghanistan. Two people were killed. Sawinder Singh was among them.

"He was trying to get a visa ever since the Taliban took over Afghanistan," his wife Pal Kaur breaks down, narrating how she feared for her husband after the Taliban stormed into the capital last year. "Had he got his visa in time he would have not have died this brutal death."   Several blasts tore through Gurdwara Karte Parwan in Kabul's Bagh-e Bala neighbourhood on Saturday, while Afghan security personnel thwarted a bigger tragedy by stopping an explosive-laden vehicle from reaching the place of worship of the minority community.

"We wanted him to come back as soon as possible. He was ready to sell his shop and move here permanently but the visa clearance never came and we lost him. In the past few months I lived with this fear only," Pal Kaur told PTI at the family's home in Delhi's Tilak Nagar.

The gurdwara was a home to at least 150 Sikhs, who have been staying there since the fall of the Ashraf Ghani government last August. Singh was also a granthi (a ceremonial reader of the Guru Granth Sahib) there.

The Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the deadly terror attack calling it "an act of support" for the Prophet. A day after the attack, India approved e-visas for over 100 Sikhs and Hindus living in Afghanistan.

Puneet Singh Chandhok, president of the India World Forum who has been coordinating with the Indian government to evacuate Sikhs from the Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, said he has been appealing to the government to grant visas to over 150 Sikhs staying there since the fall of the Ashraf Ghani government. "Singh is also among the 109 people whose visas have been approved but this came too late for him," he said.

"I have been writing to the government and had we acted promptly we could have saved him. The government should make immediate efforts to rescue those who are desperately waiting to return." Since the Taliban took power in August last year, Afghanistan has seen continuing attacks by rival Sunni Muslim militant group Islamic State.  

Show comments
Show comments

Trending News

Also In This Section


Top News


View All

CSIR develops compact, low-cost tractor for small farmers to replace bullock plough

Compact tractor can undertake farming work in a fraction of the time taken by tradition bullock plough

Ludhiana: Pushed off train, Jammu youth’s Army dreams dashed

GRP lodge FIR after month, kin rue delay

Indian electrician wins Rs 2.25 crore jackpot in Dubai

Nagendrum Borugadda, from Andhra Pradesh, has been saving AED 100 with National Bonds through direct debit since 2019

After ‘popcorn rocks’, NASA now spots ‘potato’ in space, calls it ‘space potato’

According to a June 18 post on the official NASA website, after months of driving, Perseverance arrived at ‘Bright Angel’, discovering oddly textured rock unlike any the rover has seen before

Meta AI rolls out in India on WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram

With this, people can use Meta AI in feeds and chats across its apps to get things done, create content, and deep dive into topics, without having to leave the app they are using


Most Read In 24 Hours