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Afghan Bride Confronts Missing Major

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Afghan bride confronts missing major

Ms Ahmadzai says that she has proof on video of her marriage to the army officer

By Moska Najib
BBC News, Delhi


Early morning prayers at Hazrat Nizammudin, a sufi shrine in the Indian capital, Delhi.

In the main hall of the onion-shaped dome people are milling around, their hands clasped in prayer.

Men entering the shrine pay their respects as women huddle outside, peering in.

Sitting by a pillar and praying is 20-year-old Sabra Ahmadzai. She left her home, Afghanistan, for the first time in November of last year.

Along with personal belongings which included copies of her wedding video and marriage certificate, she boarded a flight to India to confront the man she says is her missing husband - a doctor in the Indian Army.

Taboo

Ms Ahmadzai was working as a Hindi translator in a hospital in Kabul where she met her husband, Maj Chandrashekhar Pant.

Bigamy is illegal in India

She is now pursuing a case of bigamy.

"We were together for about 15 days when he was transferred back to India," she says.

"He promised to return with his parents and left. In six months he only called me three times, and in his last call he told me Sabra you are young and you can marry again - I have two kids and a wife from before."

In Afghanistan marrying a foreigner is still taboo.

But Ms Ahmadzai said that she decided to go ahead after he converted to Islam and after receiving the consent of her family and relatives.

Dressed in a white gown and holding hands, her wedding video shows the couple walking down the aisle, cutting their wedding cake and performing the ceremonial rituals of an Islamic marriage.

Ms Ahmadzai says she waited for two years for her husband to return but the talk in the neighbourhood of her abandonment became unbearable.

'Three options'

"People would often ask me why hasn't your husband returned? Does he even call you? I was quite upset by all this, so I decided to come to India and confront him."


The army says that it takes bigamy cases very seriously

Having travelled two days on a local bus to the small hill town of Pithoragarh in the Himalayas, Ms Ahmadzai met Maj Pant on the hallway of the local hospital.

She says he was taken aback by her unexpected visit to his hometown.

"I told him I will give you three options and you can choose what suits you best," she said.

"When a girl marries she lives in her husband's house, so either you let me live with your family here in India, or you and your family come with me to Afghanistan. And if you are not happy with either of these choices, then at least come to Afghanistan and divorce me in front of the same cleric and the same people."

Ms Ahmadzai - who has now been in India for more than six weeks - is grateful for the support of local students and non-government organisations (NGOs).

With their help, she has already registered a complaint with the police. Her lawyer, Ravindra Garia, says they have a solid case against the major.

"Sabra is here, there are video CDs of her marriage and she has a wedding certificate which is a documentary proof that this marriage actually took place," he says.

However, according to the local police, Maj Pant has said his picture in the wedding video has been fabricated.

"Chandrashekhar Pant denies that any marriage ceremony has taken place and believes that these photographs are actually cut and paste," Police superintendent of Pithoragarh, PS Rawat told the BBC.

'Disciplinary action'

While an inquiry is in progress, the Indian Army Chief, Deepak Kapoor, says action will only be taken if the major is found guilty.

The bride has thanked all who have helped her in Delhi

"If an inquiry reveals that an army man is at fault, he is automatically liable to appropriate disciplinary action and it will be immediately taken. The army does not believe in the philosophy of shielding a perpetrator of any kind of irregularity, corruption or crime," he said.

Gen Kapoor says the army has done its own investigation and has found a certain "dichotomy" between army records and what Ms Ahmadzai claims in her complaint to the police.

"The dichotomy stems from the fact that her so-called marriage took place in December. As per our records and according to the details of the officer on the mission to Afghanistan, he was there from January to November. So there is a basic dichotomy in what the FIR (First Information Report) has said and what the officer has done when he was detailed there," Gen Kapoor said.

Meanwhile, for Sabra Ahmadzai this is a battle that must be fought - even if it takes many years.

"I have learnt that you should not marry outside your community," she says, "and if you do then you should inquire and be careful."

As she walks out of the shrine into the winding lanes of Nizamuddin, she talks of returning to Afghanistan and opening an NGO that will help other Afghan women from being exploited in these difficult times her country is facing.

"This fight is not just for me," she says while nibbling on prayer sweets and rose petals, "but for people who are facing similar situations and they must fight it out."


BBC NEWS | South Asia | Afghan bride confronts missing major
 
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only if his finance would have used fair & lovely, this wouldn't have happened.:lol:
 
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Feel sorry for her, I wish she not only gets her divorce but a nice fat settlement and he gets thrown out of the army which he has disgraced.

Unfortunately the army seems to be claiming this "dichotomy" which in the end closes the case for her as if the army says he wasn't in Afghanistan at that time then how did the marriage takes place. Records such as those can be fabricated... VIDEOS can't really be cut n pasted, not unless some real super special effects people were used and that too can be deciphered by an expert...

Once the video is proven to be true, someone should ask the Army who changed the records? How come their records say he left by November...

Afghans are in a total illusion about their new 'friends' the Indians. Just as Iranians have the Indians all figured out and are a lot more cautious when it comes to India than they were about 10 yrs ago, Afghanis would soon come to realize what the real price of their friendship with India is.
 
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Feel sorry for her, I wish she not only gets her divorce but a nice fat settlement and he gets thrown out of the army which he has disgraced.

Unfortunately the army seems to be claiming this "dichotomy" which in the end closes the case for her as if the army says he wasn't in Afghanistan at that time then how did the marriage takes place. Records such as those can be fabricated... VIDEOS can't really be cut n pasted, not unless some real super special effects people were used and that too can be deciphered by an expert...

Once the video is proven to be true, someone should ask the Army who changed the records? How come their records say he left by November...

Afghans are in a total illusion about their new 'friends' the Indians. Just as Iranians have the Indians all figured out and are a lot more cautious when it comes to India than they were about 10 yrs ago, Afghanis would soon come to realize what the real price of their friendship with India is.

Nicely said brother, The way they Abandoned Iran when they got the Nuclear deal with USA.


I hope she will get Justice in India
 
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Ditched Afghan girl pursues Indian husband
By Amrit Dhillon, Correspondent
Published: January 24, 2009, 00:31


New Delhi: A young Afghan woman has arrived in India to confront the Indian army officer who married her two years ago in Kabul and then dumped her a fortnight later.

Sabra Ahmadzai, 20, was working as a Hindi translator in an Indian army hospital in Kabul where she met Major Chandrashekhar Pant, a doctor posted at the hospital.

"He was very keen to marry me but my parents were hesitant because he is a Hindu. He persuaded them to let me marry him and converted to Islam for my sake," she said.

Ahmadzai arrived in the Indian capital in December to be reunited with her husband only to discover that he is married with two children.

She says that after Pant - or 'Himmat Khan' as he became after his conversion - left Kabul, he called her regularly. The calls tapered off and then stopped.



Her neighbours and relatives began taunting her that she had been 'a holiday wife', ditched by a man who did not love her. Men began jeering, asking if they could also spend a fortnight with her.

"I decided that life wasn't worth living. The shame was terrible. I had to find out what had happened and why he was behaving like this. I took leave and came here to find him," she said.

After flying to New Delhi, she made a two-day bus journey to Pithoragarh in north India where Pant lives with his family and works at the local hospital.

When she confronted him, she gave him two options: let me live with you here or return to Kabul with your family and we'll all live together.

It seems that Pant refused both options and instead offered her financial compensation. "I refused his money. It maddened me to think he could buy me off. I have decided I will fight him in the courts to get justice," said Ahmadzai who is being helped by New Delhi lawyer Ravinder Garia.

Garia says Pant can be charged with bigamy. Ahmadzai has already filed a complaint with the police charging him with this offence.

Garia also wants the Indian Army to fire him. "His behaviour is unbecoming. He is an educated man who knows the law. He knew he was committing a crime. He has been dishonest and deceitful," he said.


Pant refuses to speak to the press but reporters say in the initial meetings, his wife was contemptuous towards Ahmadzai and quote her as saying "such women know how to trap men like my husband".

Mobeen Alam, an Afghan student in New Delhi, said he felt sorry for Ahmadzai because her position in Afghan society as an abandoned wife is pitiful. "She will find it hard to remarry. She made a mistake marrying a foreigner but we need to punish her husband so that other men don't do this to other girls," said Mr Alam.

Ahmadzai says that she will not rest until her 'husband' has been punished. "I have been suffering for months while he's been happy in his life. He hasn't even said sorry to me," she said.


Gulfnews: Ditched Afghan girl pursues Indian husband
 
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i salute her courage.This is a slap on the face of people who consider themselves beyond the law because of their power.:sniper:

i am with her.:tup:
 
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she is courageous girl and i hope court give her speedy justice and army should sack officers like him who ashamed their country with acts like these.
 
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Nicely said brother, The way they Abandoned Iran when they got the Nuclear deal with USA.

This just another example of how Indians Treat their lovers and how sincere they really are in their relationship.

Its common in India to see Men abandoning their wife or Girlfriend.

now, thats a loose remark..
 
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Good grief, that's not him in the white is it?

Love is indeed blind. Or perhaps $$.

Amazing what lengths Indian men will go to.

Become a Muslim for a wedding night, then back to the temple.

Good job this thing isn't common. What a poor physique.
 
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I am sure a member of the Liberating Indian armed peace keeping forces with loads of embassies would have not done such a terrible misdeed and broken Indian Law after all aren't army men trained to controll such emotions?
 
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