A mute and deaf Indian girl who has been stuck in Pakistan for more
than a decade because she cannot remember where she came from may have
finally identified
her family, the charity looking after her said Thursday.

The new ray of hope for the woman known only as Geeta, believed to be
in her early 20s, came after the Indian High Commission in Islamabad
sent her a photograph
of a family, whom she said she recognised.

The Edhi Foundation, Pakistan's largest charity who has been caring
for Geeta since she was found 13 years ago, said it was trying to
arrange a Skype video
call with the family, reported to be based somewhere in India's Bihar
province, to confirm their relationship.

"The Indian high commissioner has lately sent a family photo to us and
Geeta has recognised the family," Anwer Kazmi, a senior official at
the foundation,
told AFP.

"We hope she will confirm the family identification during the Skype
chat through sign language," Kazmi said.

Kazmi said Bilqees Edhi, wife of Edhi Foundation founder Abdul Satter
Edhi, hoped to accompany Geeta along with several other members of the
Edhi family
to India before the end of October.

"We are expecting to get visas for all very soon and hope that on
October 26 Geeta would fly back home," he said

Geeta was 11 or 12 when she was found by police alone and
disorientated with no identity papers on a train that had crossed the
border from India into
the eastern city of Lahore.

She was believed to have strayed into Pakistani territory by mistake,
but could not remember or explain exactly where she was from.

Unable to identify her or her family, Pakistani police handed her over
to the Edhi Foundation. She now lives in one of the foundation's
shelters in Karachi.

Even the name "Geeta" was given to her by Edhi staff.

The Indian government confirmed Geeta would return and said DNA tests
would be used to confirm her relation to the family.

"If DNA testing verifies that they are indeed her parents, then she
will be handed over to them," Vikas Swarup, India's foreign ministry
spokesman, told
a press conference in New Delhi.

"Our bringing her back does not depend on whether or not we discover
her parents. She is a daughter of India... we will be bringing her
back very, very
shortly," Swarup said, without specifying a date.

In August the Indian government pledged to bring Geeta home, prompted
by fresh media coverage of a smash hit Bollywood film.

"Bajrangi Bhaijaan", featuring Indian superstars Salman Khan and
Kareena Kapoor, tells the mirror image of Geeta's story: a mute young
Pakistani woman
trapped in India.

The Edhi foundation has made repeated attempts to trace Geeta's
family, but with no success.

Source:
https://in.news.yahoo.com/mute-indian-girl-stuck-pakistan-131419220.html


-- 
Regards,
Mukesh jain
Email:
mukesh.jai...@gmail.com
mukeshheerachandj...@ntpc.co.in
Skype: mukeshjain211
Mob: 09977165123
"Face your deficiencies and acknowledge them; but do not let them
master you. Let them teach you patience, sweetness, insight. "

Helen Keller



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