Geeta who is just 21, strayed into Pakistan when she mistakenly boarded a train from Amritsar, which came into Lahore where she was taken into custody. "She is deaf and mute and clearly disoriented but in last six months she has improved her communication skills a lot and we are hopeful in next few weeks she will be able to tell us about her family and home in India," said Bilqees Edhi, the wife of the noted social worker Sattar Edhi who takes care of Geeta.
Bilqees has even taken Geeta into her home to help her settle down and live a normal life. "She had a bad time when she was first detained in Lahore and kept at a shelter there after which we brought her to Karachi," she said.
Geeta is clearly desperate to get back to India and has made some attempts to escape but each time has been brought back to the Edhi trust, as she is unable to give any details of her life in India or her family.
Saram Burney, a human rights activist who has campaigned for the return of poor Indian fishermen in Pakistani jails to their homeland believes, that Geeta can return home. "She is disoriented and it is difficult getting information from her but she is now able to write down things in Hindi," he said.