Visa Restrictions and Alleged Pakistani Connections

Visa Restrictions and Alleged Pakistani Connections.webp


Guwahati, February 9 Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Monday demanded a "transparent explanation" from Congress leader Gaurav Gogoi regarding his "visit to the Rawalpindi district of Pakistan", asserting that his visa "explicitly permitted travel only to Lahore, Karachi, and Islamabad".

Sarma, in a post on X, stated that under Pakistan's immigration rules, travel beyond visa-designated cities is not permitted without specific authorisation.

His comments came in the context of a press conference by the Congress MP, where he stated that he had visited Takshashila in Pakistan with his wife, having due permission.

Sarma and Gogoi have been engaged in a verbal confrontation, with Sarma alleging that the Congress leader and his family have Pakistani connections.

Gogoi told reporters that his wife had visited Pakistan for a work-related purpose in 2013, and he had accompanied her on a 10-day trip to the neighbouring country in December of that year.

While the press conference was in progress, Sarma asserted that Gogoi had made a disclosure that he was previously unaware of.

"Takshashila (Taxila) is not located in Islamabad, but in the Rawalpindi District, Punjab. This single fact raises a serious and unavoidable question. If his Pakistan visa explicitly permitted travel only to Lahore, Karachi, and Islamabad, how did he visit Takshashila, which lies outside the Islamabad Capital Territory and squarely within the Rawalpindi District?" he said.

"Therefore, the question is simple, factual, and legitimate: Who facilitated his movement to Takshashila despite the apparent absence of visa clearance for Rawalpindi District?" Sarma said.

He further stated that this question gains significance given that the General Headquarters of the Pakistan Army is also located in Rawalpindi.

"These facts warrant a clear and transparent explanation," Sarma said.

The chief minister asserted that Gogoi did not have a visa to visit Rawalpindi, which is a "restricted, high-security" district.

"It is now almost evident that access to Rawalpindi (army headquarters) could not have occurred through routine civilian travel permissions.

"The circumstances strongly suggest that the visit was facilitated through institutional arrangements that do not require standard civilian visa endorsements," Sarma said.

On Sunday, Sarma had alleged in a press conference that Gogoi, his British wife Elizabeth Colburn, and Pakistani national Ali Tauqeer Sheikh had a "deeper connection", and that information from the Intelligence Bureau was secretly passed on to the neighbouring nation.

Gogoi had dismissed the allegations of his Pakistani connections as "most mindless and bogus". He dubbed the press conference, where Sarma made the allegations, "worse than C-grade cinema", which was a "super flop".
 
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