Saudi Arabia to deport 46 Indian beggar children
Saudi Arabia is set to deport within a week another batch of 46
Indian children, illegally staying in the oil-rich kingdom and
begging on the streets near holy places there.
According to reports received by the Indian external affairs ministry
from the Indian mission in Saudi Arabia, these children - 40 boys
and six girls - are at present lodged at the deportation centre
in Jeddah.
The Indian consulate in Jeddah is arranging food, clothing and
medical care for these children, most of whom hail from Murshidabad
in West Bengal.
Official sources said once the consulate fully verifies the antecedents
of these children, they would be deported to India within a week.
This will be the second batch of Indian children to be despatched
by the Saudi authorities for overstaying illegally in the kingdom
and earning their livelihood by begging.
Recently, 77 children, 76 of them females, were deported by the
Saudi authorities. These children are at present lodged at the
remand home in Bombay, pending their restoration to their parents.
The sources said the Indian government had started undertaking
a stricter immigration check of Saudi Arabia bound passengers
in view of the deportation of these children. ''The external affairs
ministry is examining as to how it can strengthen the immigration
check without causing inconvenience to those going for pilgrimage
to Saudi Arabia,'' they added.
Giving the background of the incident, the sources said there
seemed to be an organised racket which would buy children from
poor families from India going for the pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia.
These children are forced into begging during the haj pilgrimage
and umra (pilgrimage during the non-haj period).
The sources said the focus of this racket is now on Murshidabad,
a predominantly Muslim district in West Bengal. ''These racketeers
allure impoverished Muslim families in parting with their children
after the haj,'' the sources said.
These children are then made to beg since alms giving is a practice
observed by pilgrims at holy places. The children usually reap
a rich harvest and the money goes to these racketeers.
The sources said that begging by Indian children in the kingdom
came to light when the authorities there cracked down on foreigners
overstaying after the previous haj.
The sources said the Saudi authorities' 'operation cleansing'
before the next haj, scheduled for April, is still on in Mecca
and Medina.
However, this is the first time that the Saudi authorities have
detected Indian children illegally staying in the kingdom and
begging.
The sources said the Indian government has also asked the West
Bengal government to closely monitor the situation in Murshidabad
to which most of the children deported belong.
UNI
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