News Headlines
Clatanoff met Ansar
Burney at Abu Dhabi:
Abu Dhabi: The Assistant Secretary of State at the Executive
Office of the US President at Washington, Mr William B. Clatanoff
has visited the Shelter Home established by the UAE Leadership
for the rescued underage child camel jockeys in Abu Dhabi,
first of its kind in the history of entire region and met
world renowned human rights activist Ansar Burney.
The first rehabilitation centre for underage Child Camel
Jockeys under the supervision of the Ansar Burney Welfare
Trust International in Abu Dhabi (UAE) is in accordance with
the UAE government's policy to eliminate the use of underage
boys in this sport.
The Shelter Home for the underage children is the first of
its kind in the Gulf, Middle East and Arab Countries, dedicated
to helping the boys after UAE authorities and Ansar Burney
Welfare Trust International rescues them. The UAE authorities
in association with the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International
(ABWTI) will run it.
The
centre was established on the orders of General Shaikh Mohammad
Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy
Supreme Commander of the United Arab Emirates Armed Forces,
to eliminate the use of under-age camel jockeys in races.
The centre, which has been established in Shaikh Zayed Military
City in the capital, has all the facilities the children need
for a better future, such as healthcare, very good atmosphere,
good food and education. Doctors, surgeons, physiotherapists
and psychologists will help rehabilitate children rescued
from camps throughout the UAE.
The renowned human rights activist, Ansar Burney, Advocate,
member of the American Bar Association (USA), International
Bar Association (UK) and Karachi Bar Association (Pakistan),
received Mr William Clatanoff along with the Political Secretary
of the US Embassy at Abu Dhabi, Ms Sussan K. Raddant and Economic
Affairs Counselor, Ms Emily L. Williams when they arrived
at the Center.
Mr William Clatanoff lauded the great human rights services
rendering by the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International
around the globe. He also congratulated President HH Sheikh
Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan especially congratulated and lauded
the great efforts of the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy
Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, HH Sheikh Mohammed
bin Zayed Al Nahyan in this regard.
He spent two hours in the Center with human rights ‘Angel’
Ansar Burney and the rescued children.
Pictures of the Shelter
home
for the rescued under age camel jockey children
Daily Gulf News (Dubai) UAE
Nation | Society
Published: 2/12/2004, 11:33 (UAE)
Under-age camel jockeys
get caring hand
By Ashfaq Ahmed, Staff Reporter
Dubai: The first rehabilitation centre for young camel jockeys
in Abu Dhabi is in acordance with the government's policy
to eliminate the use of underage boys in this sport.
The centre is the first of its kind in the world dedicated
to helping the boys after they are rescued by authorities.
It will be run by the UAE authorities in association with
the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International in Pakistan (ABWTI).
Ansar
Burney, a human rights activist and chairman of ABWTI, spoke
to Gulf News in an exclusive interview about the plight of
these children, what can be done to help them and prevent
future abuses.
Burney said the centre, which has been established in Shaikh
Zayed Military City in the capital, has all the facilities
the children need for a better future, such as healthcare
and education.
Doctors, physiotherapists and psychologists will help rehabilitate
children rescued from camps throughout the country.
"The children who are rescued from these camps will
be kept at the centre for four to eight weeks before being
repatriated to their home countries.
"Some 400 children can be accommodated at the centre,
which is expected to start its work from Thursday [today],"
he said, adding that the UAE Government is taking historic
steps to end the problem.
Burney,
who has been given a residence visa, also has permission to
rescue underage children smuggled into the country.
"During my meeting with Shaikh Mohammad, he told me
that the government is committed to resolving the issue of
camel jockeys and wants me to work for eliminating this problem,"
said Burney, who also met Major General Shaikh Saif Bin Zayed
Al Nahyan, the Interior Minister.
Burney, who has repatriated 379 under-age jockeys this year,
will also establish rehabilitation centres in Pakistan and
Bangla-desh to help repatriated children.
The
UAE is the first government with a camel racing industry to
ban the use of underage, underweight jockeys.
A law that came into effect on September 1, 2002, bans the
use of children younger than 15 as camel jockeys. For a first
offence a fine of Dh20,000 is imposed.
A
second offence earns a ban from participating in the camel
races for one year, while the third and subsequent offences
will result in a prison term.
These measures were introduced in an effort to maintain camel
racing as a worthy sport that meets its objectives.
The UAE Ministry of Interior is responsible for implementing
the rules, in association with the local municipalities, while
the country's airports and seaports have also been notified
to ensure that no child younger than 15 is admitted when authorities
suspect he is being brought in as a camel jockey.
Camel races are also held in Saudi
Arabia
UNDERAGE CHILD CAMEL JOCKEYS
in Saudi Arabia:
 Camel
races are held each year at the Janadriyah festival area on
the northeast side of Riyadh in Saudi Arabia. The unfortunate
camel jockies are little kids under the ages of three to seven
years only, on slave labour, living in private jails under
most miserable circumstances. This year's camel race winner
was a 6 years old boy.
 The
Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International recently visited
Riyadh (Saudi Arabia) and witnessed that the underage children
from the ages of 3 to 7 are living in private jails and working
as 'Child Camel Jockeys' on slave labour.
Feleke T. Assefa
visited under age
child camel jockey shelter home at Abu Dhabi 
Abu Dhabi: The Senior Reports Officer at the United States
Department of State at Washington, Mr Feleke T. ASSEFA has
visited the under age child camel jockeys Shelter Home and
met with Mr Ansar Burney. The first rehabilitation centre
for underage Child Camel Jockeys under the supervision of
the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International in Abu Dhabi
(UAE) is in accordance with the UAE government's policy to
eliminate the use of underage boys in this sport.
The Shelter Home for the underage children is dedicated to
helping the boys after UAE authorities and Ansar Burney Welfare
Trust International rescues them. The UAE authorities in association
with the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International (ABWTI)
will run it. The centre was established on the orders of His
Highness General Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown
Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the United
Arab Emirates Armed Forces, to eliminate the use of under-age
camel jockeys in races.
 |
Ansar Burney asks Gulf
and Arab countries to ban
Slave Labour and release all
underage 'Child Camel Jockeys'
from Private Jails:
LONDON - The Pakistan's most renowned human rights
activist, Ansar Burney has demanded from the Gulf, Middle
East and Arab countries to release all the underage children
from Private Jails, working on slave labour as ‘Child
Camel Jockeys‘.
Mr Ansar Burney, Advocate, said that less or more 40,000 underage
children, mostly from Asian and African countries including
Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, SriLanka, Somalia, Ethiopia and
Sudan are being used in Gulf, Middle East and Arab Countries,
as "child camel jockeys" against their will and
under most miserable circumstances. These children whose ages
are from two years to seven years are living in private jails
on slave labour.
Ansar
Burney, Advocate, also member of The International Bar Association
(UK), American Bar Association (USA) and Karachi Bar Association
(Pakistan) has demanded with Saudi Arabia, Dubai, Kuwait,
Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, Egypt and other parts of Gulf, Middle
East and Arab regions to banned slavery and released all less
or more 40,000 children from the private jails at once with
paying some compensation to them. He said the Ansar Burney
Welfare Trust International is ready to help the respective
governments for the rehabilitation of these children in their
respective home countries.
Mr Burney lauded the great efforts of the United Arab Emirates
leadership on their kind cooperation with Ansar Burney Welfare
Trust International in combating the heinous crime from the
land of UAE and also establishing a Shelter Home in Abu Dhabi
for the rescued children from camel jockeys camps.
This
Shelter Home for the rescued child camel jockeys is the first
of its kind in the entire region dedicated to helping the
small children after they are rescued by the Ansar Burney
Welfare Trust International with the kind cooperation of the
UAE Authorities. Burney said the facility illustrates the
UAE government’s policy to eliminate the sport’s
use of underage children. The centre was established on the
orders of His Highness General Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al
Nahyan, The Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and The Deputy Supreme
Commander of the United Arab Emirates Armed Forces, to eliminate
the use of under-age camel jockeys in races. Mr Burney congratulated
The President of the UAE His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed
Al Nahyan in this regard.
Ansar Burney, by profession a senior lawyer, has already rescued
hundreds of such children whose ages are from one and a half
to six years old and rehabilitated them in Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Srilanka, Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia and other parts of the
world.
Mr. Burney says: "These innocent children of humanity
are living in iron tents, without electricity, and in temperatures
above 50 degree centigrade (over 100 degree Fahrenheit). Sexual
abuse in this environment is all too common, even electric
shocks. The children are purposely underfed so that their
weight is kept down." The agents are giving them electric
shocks if any small boy will not work properly.
"The food they are given in the camps is very dirty and
unhygienic. They have to feed the camels, but are beaten if
they try to eat the animals 'good' food. They are allowed
to eat only half a loaf of bread in 24 hours. They get up
at 3:00 AM in the morning and go to sleep at 9:00 PM at night
working for 18 hours a day". Ansar Burney said.
"They
sleep in hot crowded huts made from corrugated irons sheets.
It's boiling hot out in the desert yet they have to train
twice or three times a day. It’s hard and painful work
and, after a while, the boys have permanent damage to their
sexual organs from bouncing up and down on the camel".
"During training and in races they often fall down and
are badly injured or crushed to death. Because it's illegal
to keep underage jockeys they never receive medical treatment
and some of them die very painful deaths. Their bodies are
just buried out in the desert in unmarked graves". Burney
added.
Ansar Burney says the Rulers and Sheikhs of the ruling families
in these countries own most of the camel camps and are responsible
of this heinous crime against humanity.
The trafficking of young children for forced labour is one
of the fastest growing areas in international crime. A study
by the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International pointed out
that child trafficking is not new but it is a current practice
in most of the Middle East and Arab region. It has, however,
gathered considerably momentum over the past few years.
It is the work of international networks that have made it
a sophisticated and well-organised human trafficking industry
in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Srilanka, Ethiopia, Somalia,
Sudan and other poor countries. It has become a means to earn
a living for those criminals who torture the lives of these
innocent children and gain pleasure from their tears and cursing.
Camel racing in the Region is an old sport but they do not
using there own children as jockeys. During his work and research
over several years on this particular issue Mr. Ansar Burney
never found any Arab child being used as a jockey.
Why is trafficking of children so popular? The root causes
are multiple and complex. Some are obvious such as extreme
levels of poverty. It is far easier to persuade parents to
part with their children when if they don't sell one or two
of their children they will all die of poverty, unemployment,
illiteracy and ignorance. Inadequate legislation and weak
enforcement of related laws also contribute heavily to the
problem. Greedy organized groups have made this into a business
at the expense of the lives of these children.
The trafficking of children for use as camel jockeys is strictly
prohibited by the United Nations Convention on the Rights
of the Child and by ILO Conventions 29, 138 and 182. All of
these laws have been ratified by the Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait,
Qatar, Bahrain, Lebanon and other countries but the problem
is still growing at an alarming rate. 
During the last few years hundreds of children were rescued
by the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International, from the
UAE, Muscat, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and other
Arab and Middle East countries after working for more than
two and three years as camel jockeys.
Recently the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International has
made a video documentary film of more than 30 hours with a
hidden video camera on the plight of these unfortunate children.
The children are attached to the camels back with Velcro fastenings
but so rough is the ride that many of them fall off. One of
the 'advantages' of using children as jockeys is that their
terrified cries make the camels run even faster.
Many of the child jockeys have been kidnapped from their villages
in countries such as Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri
Lanka and Sudan. Agents have bought some from impoverished
families. Others are lured from home with promises to their
families that they will be employed as domestic servants in
cities in their own countries.
Ansar Burney demanded for the immediate release of
all such children from Private Jails and Slavery. He requested
the world to help him in this regard.
 |
Ansar Burney met Ambassadors
in Abu Dhabi:
Mr
Ansar Burney and Mrs Shaheen Burney, in Abu Dhabi,
UAE met the Ambassadors of Pakistan, Bangladesh, Srilanka
and Sudan to discuss with them the underage child camel jockeys
issue. Most of the underage children are coming to
Middle East and Arab countries from above Asian countries.
Those working as underage child camel jockeys on slave labour
in private jails are from the ages of two and a half to seven
years old only.
Daily Khaleej Times Online
>> News >> THE U.A.E
Dated: 2 September 2004
19 smuggled Pak kids head home
By Asma Ali Zain
DUBAI - Nineteen Pakistani children, aged between
two to eight years, who were brought into the country illegally
by unscrupulous agents and ‘imposter’ parents
were flown back to Pakistan yesterday.
Out of the 19 children, 10 had valid passports while nine
were issued outpasses by the Pakistan Consulate here, said
Pakistani Human Rights Activist and Advocate Ansar Burney
whose visit was meant to rescue the kidnapped children and
send them back to their ‘original’ parents in
Pakistan.
Speaking to Khaleej Times, Pakistani Consul-General Amanullah
Larik confirmed that nine outpasses had been issued for the
children while five adults would accompany them. “The
children were brought to the consulate last night and the
consulate staff issued outpasses for them on a priority basis,”
he said.
Shafi Samana, President of Pakistan Association, Dubai, said
that the association had arranged for the air tickets for
the nine children and five adults. “As part of its efforts
to help the needy Pakistanis in the UAE, the association has
donated the tickets to the 14 people from its welfare fund,”
he said.
“The whole exercise was not possible without the help
of the government authorities who helped us trace the children
from all over the emirates. The cooperation of the Pakistan
Embassy in Abu Dhabi, Pakistan Consulate in Dubai and the
Pakistan Association is laudable due to which I have been
able to take these children back to Pakistan,” said
Mr Burney.
The 19 children had either been kidnapped or sold by the
parents and brought to the UAE from the rural areas of Punjab
including Dera Ghazi Khan and Multan, he said. “Five
adults claiming to be the parents of the children are also
being sent to Pakistan. “Whether their claims are true
or not will be verified once we get back to Pakistan,”
said Mr Burney adding that the tedious and heart wrenching
process of finding the true parents of the children would
start once the children are back in Pakistan and are in a
state to talk.
Placing the blame on child trafficking in third world countries,
Mr Burney said that the issue has to be tackled at its root
cause.
“In Pakistan, parents of such children are either duped
by unscrupulous agents who claim to “adopt” the
child, or in many cases, parents sell off their children for
money,” he explained.
“Corruption and poverty led the poor parents to sell
off their offspring, which is a very sad problem,” he
said.
Describing the condition of the children, Mr Burney said
that the children had been brain-washed and were made to believe
that the people accompanying them were their true parents.
“The modus operandi of these ‘agents’ is
that after the kidnap or purchase of the children, they get
them endorsed in the mother’s passport or get a separate
passport for the child after which the child can travel internationally
with his ‘parents’ without arousing any suspicion.
Giving a background of the child trafficking issue Mr Burney
said that children were trafficked from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh,
Sri Lanka and several countries in Africa and brought to the
Middle Eastern countries for several reasons.
Mr Burney’s Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International
(ABWTI) has successfully traced out more than 82,000 children
from the world over through its ‘Bureau of Missing and
Kidnapped Persons’ and has delivered them safely to
their families.
Daily Khaleej Times Online
>> News >> THE U.A.E
25 November 2004
UAE plans to end the menace
By Asma Ali Zain
DUBAI — When American TV channel HBO telecast the 25-minute
documentary Real Sports on the pitiful conditions of young
camel jockeys early this month, Pakistani Human Rights Activist
Ansar Burney never thought that the world would cry with him.
Later, the documentary made my Ansar Burney Welfare Trust
(ABWT), caught the attention of UAE leaders who invited Burney
over to Abu Dhabi, assuring him of all the government’s
support needed in eradicating the menace from the country.
In an exclusive interview with Khaleej Times, Burney said
he was invited to the UAE by the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi,
General Shaikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan who lauded Burney’s
human rights services around the globe and discussed the child
camel jockey issue and the state of Pakistani prisoners in
the UAE jails.
“The UAE government has assured me of their support
and have also said that soon, the United Nations, the entire
world and the ABWT will see great decisions taken by the UAE
government in improving the human rights situation further
in the country,” he said.
Burney also said that he later met with Major-General Shaikh
Saif bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Minister of Interior, who also assured
him of the government’s support in eradicating this
heinous crime from the UAE.
“The
UAE government is taking historical steps to ensure that this
crime is over in the country, which could see other Gulf states
following suit,” said Burney.
Speaking about the documentary that his Trust had filmed,
Burney said that sexually-abused child camel jockeys were
shown being forced to ride camels, while their living quarters
were in a miserable condition.
“This film was enough to shake the entire world. The
original film is a 30-hour movie which covers several aspects,
while the edited version shown on HBO is only of 25 minutes,”
explained Burney.
He said that the UAE government had granted him an open visa
so that he could enter the country whenever he wished and
to help take the children back to their countries.
“The actual people responsible for committing this
heinous crime are ‘agents’ who smuggle children
from the Third World countries including Pakistan, India and
Bangladesh and sell them in the Arab countries,” he
said.
Burney also said that as per his meeting with Gen. Shaikh
Mohammed, all government departments had been instructed to
tackle the issue as soon as possible.
Kid jockeys to be sent back home
DUBAI — Beginning today, child camel jockeys will be
extradited to their home countries with the official help
of the UAE government. “Though I have been helping children
in need for a long time, now with the official support of
the government, the process of extradition will be easier,”
he said.
“Extradition of the children in large numbers may create
panic, so we are planning on taking them back to their countries
in smaller numbers. Before that, we also need to bring them
out of their state-of-shock so that they can recover well,”
he explained.
Shaheen Burney, the wife of Ansar Burney is also accompanying
him on his visit to the UAE on the special invitation of General
Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai
and UAE Defence Minister.
 |
List
of 182 Indian prisoners held
in Pakistani Jails since 1971
By: Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International
KARACHI - The Chairman of the International human rights
organisation, Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International, Mr
Ansar Burney, Advocate, has said that more or less 200 Indian
prisoners, have still been languishing in different Pakistani
jails, since 1971, with many suffering from loss of memory
and mental illness.
Including five women, these Indian national prisoners are
languishing within the high walls without any legal justification
even without producing them in any court of law in the last
more than one to three decades.
Ansar Burney said that he was working on this issue since
last several years and after having the details now he is
trying his best to get their release as early as possible
to reunite them with their lost family members in India, in
the very greater interest of humanity, justice and human rights.
According to the information received by the Ansar Burney
Welfare Trust International many of these unfortunates entered
through Boarders mistakenly into Pakistani territory. A number
of the unfortunate prisoners, have lost their memory and are
suffering from depression and psychiatric problems.
Ansar Burney has urged the Pakistani Government to release
all such prisoners without any further delay. He also requested
the Chief Justice of Pakistan to look into it and please ask
the Government to release all such human beings those because
of miseries also lost their memories.
According to details out of 182 Indian prisoners, 30 of them
are Muslims and rest of them are Hindus, Sikhs and Christians.
Ansar Burney said that the detainees were never produced before
any court of law in Pakistan.
Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International is now contacting
the Indian government to help their release and reunion with
families across borders.
Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International has released the
names of the Indian prisoners in Pakistani Jails:
Mrs Fatima Bibi wife of Ramzan Khan, Mrs Matii daughter of
Sita Ram, Mrs Teena Peka Wife of Rajesh, Maya daughter of
Wall Singh, Miss Naeema Shabnam daughter of Abdul Mian, Gopal
Bhagat s/o Heman Bagat, Pershutum Lal s/o Charan Das, Ibrahim
Ghulam s/o Ghulam Hussain, Waljis s/o Raimal, Mohammad Amin
s/o Haji Mohammad, Mohammad Javed Hussain s/o Mohammad Gulzar
Hussain, Mehan Khan so Adat Khan, Qasim s/o Mohamamd, Liaqat
Khan s/o Qurdat Khan, Manoranjan alias Mohammad Imran s/o
Widya Sagar, Hira Lal s/o Dalair Singh, Munawar Lal s/o Das
Ram, Hadeep Singh s/o Charan Singh, Talal Raj s/o Punjab Raj,
Ameerjeet Singh s/o Mohinder Pall, Kernail Singh s/o Kartar
Singh, Narmal Singh s/o Sonara Singh, Sohan Singh s/o Sinjgara
Singh, Rajeev Singh S/O Jashveender Singh, Satesh Kumar s/o
Shery Mohar Lal, Rakesh Kumar s/o Jeet Ram, Sirbjeet Singh
s/o Dilbagh Singh, Jaspal Singh s/o Sardar Chaman Singh, Sohan
Singh s/o Ameerjeet Singh, Jaspal Singh s/o Suran Singh, Jernel
Singh s/o Suran Singh, Charhanjeet Singh s/o Balvaher Singh,
Mehender Singh s/o Darshan Singh, Perdeep Kumar s/o Harbans
Lal, Gagan Deep Singh s/o Dersaj, Haresh Kumar s/o Mangoram,
Baljeet Singh s/o Taram Singh, arseel Lal s/o Boota Lal, Karnel
Singh s/o Purdeep Singh, Jamspal Singh s/o Sevram Singh, Otar
Singh s/o of Mangha Singh, Shahra Singh s/o Sone Singh, Davinder
Singh s/o Lakhvinder Singh, Daveinder Singh s/o Lakhvinder
Singh, Ilyas s/o Badiu, Mohammad Usman s/o Mohammad Amin,
Mohammad Sadiq alias Wela s/o Wali Mohammad, Ram Kumar s/o
of Amir Kumar, Shahidul Islam s/o Abdul Hassan, Abdul Wonyou
s/o Abdul Rehman, Umer Farooq s/o Karim Din, Shahbuddin Mir
s/o Sirajuddin Mir, Surjeet Singh s/o Sucha Singh, Karpal
Singh s/o Dwas Singh, Ashok Kumar s/o Soran Das, Boota Ram
s/o Dharam Chand, Gopal Das s/o Baharia Lal, Gurbukush Ram
s/o of Amer Nath, Kuldeep Kumar s/o Nanak Chand, Kaldeep Singh
s/o Chanda Singh, Mana Masih s/o Pala Masih, Manga Ram s/o
Kaqtar Ram, Pervez Ahmed Masood s/o Mohamamd Yousaf Masoodi,
Ram Parkash s/o of Dewan Chand, Kashmir Singh s/o Sansar Singh,
Manjeet Singh s/o Solkehea Singh, Abdul Nasir s/o Abdul Razaak,
Ataf Hussain s/o Ghulam Hussain, Ameerjeet Singh s/o Solekehea
Singh, Amjad Khan s/o Bazaid Khan, Babu Ram s/o Kaiser Chand,
Behram s/o unknown, Bharat Boshan s/o Sat Poul, Chnna Singh
s/o of Ujagar Singh, Chanranjeet Singh s/o Raj Singh, Charan
Singh s/o Hamen Singh, Chitran Das s/o Saman Dad, Dave Das
s/o Pooran Das, Daveinder Singh s/o Auter Singh, Dubinder
Singh s/o Naitar Singh, Ganga Ram s/o Ram Chander, Golu s/o
Mehru, Gourpreet Singh s/o Manjeet Singh, Gula Ram s/o Beeka
Ram, Gurumail Singh s/o Sawaran, Hakim Singh s/o Janab Singh,
Hardeep Singh s/o Rolda Singh, Haribhoran Singh s/o Guru Pangi
Singh, Harbans Lal s/o Kohlu Ram, Jagtar Singh s/o Ghore Bachan,
Jasvant Singh s/o Narovander Singh, Jatinder Kunar s/o Sohan
Lal, Journeil Singh s/o Banta Singh, Kala Singh s/o Sunder
singh, Kuldeep Singh s/o Sadhu Singh, Kalveer Singh s/o Chanan
Singh, Kalvinder Singh s/o Hervent Singh, Kamal Jeet Singh
s/o Jagir Singh, Karamat Rahi Masih s/o Saith Shama Masih,
Khurshid Ahmed s/o Abdul Ahad, Lukvinder Singh s/o Balbir
Singh, Lukhvinder Singh s/o Kartar Singh, Lal Chand s/o Tarsem
Lal, Mahel Singh s/o Pur Singh, Majender Singh s/o Lal Singh,
Makhen Singh s/o Chanan Singh, Malkeet Singh s/o Fata Singh,
Manjeet Singh s/o Kabal Singh, Mir Mohammad s/o Haji Matloob,
Mohan Lal s/o Mangi Lal, Mohammad Ali s/o Sarmoj Ali, Mohammad
Irshad s/o Mohammad Akbar, Mohamamd Ashraf s/o Abdul Rashid,
Mohammad Hassan s/o Mohammad Riaz, Mohammad Kamal s/o Mohammad
Fazal, Mohammad Muslim Din s/o Abdul Aziz, Mohammad Riasat
s/o Abdul Aziz, Naseem Paul s/o Bhopal, Navinder Pal s/o Stapal,
Nazarul Islam s/o Phool Mian, Nishan Sinh s/o Piyara Singh,
Parkash s/o Gana, Peeru Dival s/o Badu Lal, Pervaiz s/o Abdul
Jabar, Pretum Singh s/o Bakhshu Lal, Radhey Sham s/o Bansi
Lal, Rahat s/o Abdul Hai, Ram Das s/o Frash Chand Das, Ram
Paul, s/o Ram Dari, Ramu Ram s/o Shame Ram, Rashi Paul s/o
Shahi Paul, Sheikh Mohammad s/o Amir Mohammad, Sheikh Mansoor
Ali s/o Sh Anwar Ali, Surjeet Singh s/o Rolda, Rehmat Din
s/o Illam Din, Shambu Nath s/o Kunjan Chand, Suni Masih s/o
Fazal Masih, Syed Rafique s/o Syed Bashir Ahmed, Mohamamd
Razzak s/o Naik Mohammad, Liaqat Ali s/o Sain Mohammad, Swaran
Lal Khotra s/o Shive Ram, Tajinder Kumar s/o Ram Singh, Veegana
s/o Ram Bhai, Vijay Kumar s/o Krishan Chand, Warnu s/o Shosha,
Balvinder s/o Bachari Singh, Bashir Ahmed, s/o Azmatulah,
BJ Singh s/o Parkash, David Masih, s/o Pitras Mashi, Kaka
Ram s/o Baloch Ram, Manga Sheikh s/o Mohammad Sharif, Mohammad
Afzal s/o Nazar Mohammad, Mohammad Ashraf s/o Mir Ullah, Abdul
Aziz s/o Muhammad Din, Mohammad Irshad s/o Lal Hussain, Mohammad
Shafi s/o Piswal, Naseeb Chand s/o Sunder Das, Nazir Ahmad
s/o Abdul Rashid, Omparkash s/o Dittu Ram, Parkash Chand s/o
Dhana Ram, Parkash s/o Gula Budho Ram, Mukhtar Ahmed s/o Allam
Din, Abdul Rahid s/o Tana, Singh, Sukhveer Singh s/o Nadra
Singh, Sukhvender Singh s/o Gurmukh Singh, Suraj Paul s/o
Jeet Ram, Suresh Kumar s/o Valati Ram, Surender Paul s/o Rathis
Ram and one prisoner even does not know his name.
Ansar Burney said that the relatives of the
Indian prisoners could contact to Ansar Burney Welfare Trust
International in this regard. He also requested the Indian
government or any one having knowledge about these prisoners
or their relatives to immediately contact Ansar Burney Welfare
Trust International.
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