139 Indian pilgrims leave for Shree Katas Raj Dham in Pakistan

Chakwal– Dec 09 (ANI): A group of Indian pilgrims, comprising 139 people on Sunday left for Shree Katas Raj Dham in Pakistan's Chakwal district. 


With the echoes of 'Jai Kara', the group left for Pakistan via Wagah border. Shiv Pratap Bajaj, the leader of the group stated that several people were denied visa during former Pakistan prime minister Nawaz Sharif government. 


Katas Raj, is considered as one of the holiest places for the Hindu community in Pakistan. The temples form a complex surrounding a pond named Katas -- which is regarded as sacred by the devotees. 


The six-day pilgrimage will also include religious congregation where Hindu families from across Pakistan will gather. 
The Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi issued visas to the pilgrims to visit the temple from December 9-15. 
The Pakistan-India Protocol on Visits to Religious Shrines (1974) governs reciprocal visits by Indian and Pakistani pilgrims to designated shrines in Pakistan and India. 


Pakistan’s High Commissioner Sohail Mahmood stated that the issuance of visas to the Indian pilgrims from India "was consistent with the Government of Pakistan’s policy of promoting visits to religious shrines and was a reflection of Pakistan’s commitment to faithfully implement the 1974 Protocol." "Pakistan remained committed to providing all possible facilitation for the visiting pilgrims and strengthening people-to-people exchanges between the two countries," he said in a press statement. 


Recently, Imran Khan-led Pakistan government laid the foundation stone of the Kartarpur Corridor along the India-Pakistan border. Once opened, the route would allow Sikh pilgrims a direct access to the historic Gurudwara Darbar Sahib in Kartarpur, Pakistan, where Guru Nanak Dev died in 1539. (ANI) 
––- 

Leave Comment