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Indian 'mystery woman': Family not mine

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An Indian woman who was stranded in Pakistan for a decade has returned home, but said the family she identified in photos was not hers.

India's Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj said the woman, named Geeta, is "refusing to recognise her family".

Geeta arrived in Delhi on Monday morning, days after she identified her family in photos sent from India.

The government will now carry out a DNA test to ascertain if the family, who met her in Delhi, is really hers.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

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An Indian woman who was stranded in Pakistan for a decade has returned home, but said the family she identified in photos was not hers.

India's Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj said the woman, named Geeta, is "refusing to recognise her family".

Geeta arrived in Delhi on Monday morning, days after she identified her family in photos sent from India.

The government will now carry out a DNA test to ascertain if the family, who met her in Delhi, is really hers.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

If you want to receive Breaking News alerts via email, or on a smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App then details on how to do so are available on this help page. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on Twitter to get the latest alerts.


Geeta: Indian 'mystery girl' returns home from Pakistan
  • 4 hours ago
  • From the sectionIndia
_86326023_86326021.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionGeeta is hearing and speech impaired
An Indian woman stranded in Pakistan for a decade has returned to India.

Geeta arrived in Delhi on Monday morning, days after she identified her family in photos sent from across the border.

Geeta, who has speech and hearing impairments, was about 11 when she is believed to have strayed into Pakistan.

Her plight emerged following a Bollywood film Bajrangi Bhaijaan, which told the story of a Pakistani girl who cannot speak and is trapped in In

Geeta and members of the Edhi Foundation charity accompanying her from Karachi were received in Delhi by officials from the Pakistani High Commission and India's foreign ministry.

Efforts to find her family began in August after India accepted that she was one of its citizens.

She is believed to have identified a family from the eastern state of Bihar as her own, but at least two other families have claimed that Geeta is their daughter.

At the scene: Shahzeb Jillani, BBC News, Karachi
The Pakistani media is closely following Geeta's journey back home. Her departure from Karachi was widely covered on news channels this morning.

Geeta's homecoming is being seen as a rare example of humanitarian cooperation between the two hostile neighbours.

Recent tensions between the two nuclear armed nations have seen cancellations of a series of bilateral meetings, most recently between cricketing officials in Mumbai.

"She's not really separating from us. We will keep in touch with her," Faisal Edhi of the charity that cared for her in Pakistan said in a news conference before her departure.

Mr Edhi added that there was confusion regarding Geeta's family in Bihar, but hoped it would be clarified on the basis of a DNA test.

Geeta was presented with flowers and gifts before she left the country.

Authorities have said they will conduct a DNA test before handing her over to any family.

If the tests are negative, she will be cared for at a shelter home in India until her family is traced, officials said.

_86325232_86325221.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionGeeta was about 11 when she is believed to have strayed into Pakistan
_86325236_86325235.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionBilqees Edhi (right) looked after Geeta in an orphanage
_86325260_86325259.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionEfforts to find her family began in August after India accepted that she was one of its citizens
For most of her time in Pakistan, Geeta has lived at an Edhi shelter home in Karachi, reports the BBC's Shahzeb Jillani. Staff at the charity gave her her name - she is now thought to be about 22.

Although it was long thought that Geeta was Indian, it was only in August that the authorities in Delhi accepted her as a citizen - and said she would be brought back home soon.
 
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Geeta: Indian 'mystery girl' returns home from Pakistan
  • 4 hours ago
  • From the sectionIndia
_86326023_86326021.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionGeeta is hearing and speech impaired
An Indian woman stranded in Pakistan for a decade has returned to India.

Geeta arrived in Delhi on Monday morning, days after she identified her family in photos sent from across the border.

Geeta, who has speech and hearing impairments, was about 11 when she is believed to have strayed into Pakistan.

Her plight emerged following a Bollywood film Bajrangi Bhaijaan, which told the story of a Pakistani girl who cannot speak and is trapped in In

Geeta and members of the Edhi Foundation charity accompanying her from Karachi were received in Delhi by officials from the Pakistani High Commission and India's foreign ministry.

Efforts to find her family began in August after India accepted that she was one of its citizens.

She is believed to have identified a family from the eastern state of Bihar as her own, but at least two other families have claimed that Geeta is their daughter.

At the scene: Shahzeb Jillani, BBC News, Karachi
The Pakistani media is closely following Geeta's journey back home. Her departure from Karachi was widely covered on news channels this morning.

Geeta's homecoming is being seen as a rare example of humanitarian cooperation between the two hostile neighbours.

Recent tensions between the two nuclear armed nations have seen cancellations of a series of bilateral meetings, most recently between cricketing officials in Mumbai.

"She's not really separating from us. We will keep in touch with her," Faisal Edhi of the charity that cared for her in Pakistan said in a news conference before her departure.

Mr Edhi added that there was confusion regarding Geeta's family in Bihar, but hoped it would be clarified on the basis of a DNA test.

Geeta was presented with flowers and gifts before she left the country.

Authorities have said they will conduct a DNA test before handing her over to any family.

If the tests are negative, she will be cared for at a shelter home in India until her family is traced, officials said.

_86325232_86325221.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionGeeta was about 11 when she is believed to have strayed into Pakistan
_86325236_86325235.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionBilqees Edhi (right) looked after Geeta in an orphanage
_86325260_86325259.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionEfforts to find her family began in August after India accepted that she was one of its citizens
For most of her time in Pakistan, Geeta has lived at an Edhi shelter home in Karachi, reports the BBC's Shahzeb Jillani. Staff at the charity gave her her name - she is now thought to be about 22.

Although it was long thought that Geeta was Indian, it was only in August that the authorities in Delhi accepted her as a citizen - and said she would be brought back home soon.

Geeta: Indian village awaits return of 'mystery girl'
  • 26 October 2015
  • From the sectionIndia
_84654737_geeta2.jpg

Image captionGeeta is hearing and speech impaired, but tries to communicate through hand gestures and writing
An Indian woman found on the Pakistani side of the border more than a decade ago has returned home after recently identifying her family in photossent from across the border.

BBC Hindi's Salman Ravi travels to the village in the eastern state of Bihar to meet the excited family that the woman, named Geeta, has identified as her own.

Geeta, who has speech and hearing impairments, was about 11 when she is believed to have strayed into Pakistan.

As the time nears for Geeta to be re-united with her family, excitement looms large in the Kabeera Dhaap village in Saharsa district.

Villager Janardhan Mahato has claimed that Geeta is his daughter, Heera, who was lost in a fair in Ludhiana city in the western Indian state of Punjab which shares a border with Pakistan.

Mr Mahato has been taken to India capital, Delhi, to meet Geeta when she returns from Pakistan on Monday.

The village, meanwhile, is anxiously waiting for her return.

Situated on an island on the Kosi river, Kabeera Dhaap lacks in even basic amenities like electricity and the only way to reach it is by boat followed by a 2km (1.24 miles) walk.

And the villagers say they have long been neglected by the authorities.

_86292795_img_5108.jpg

Image captionThe only way to reach the village is by boat
"Nobody ever comes to our village. It is difficult to reach and neither politicians nor officials ever visit us. Now Geeta has shot into fame and we hope her return will bring the attention of officials to our village," says Raj Dev, Mr Mahato's brother.

Since Geeta, now believed to be about 22, identified her parents and siblings in the photograph, at least two other families have claimed that Geeta as their own.

Authorities have said they will conduct a DNA test before handing her over to any family.

But the residents of Kabeera Dhaap village say they are absolutely sure of her identity and that they last saw Geeta when she was married and moved to Punjab with her husband.

"We are absolutely sure that Geeta is our Heera. We have seen her grow up in the village. We saw her get married and then she left with her husband for Ludhiana. We know the DNA test will establish our claim," said villager Edison Mahato.

Janardhan Mahato, who works as a farm labourer, searched for his daughter for five years in Ludhiana, the villagers say.

_86292797_img_5179.jpg

Image caption"I am her elder brother. We have recognised her. Back in Pakistan, she has also recognised the photographs of our father and the family," says Balram Mahato
"When there was no clue, he returned home disheartened."

Efforts to find her family began in August after India accepted for the first time that Geeta was one of its citizens.

The family and the villagers recognised her after Indian television channels started airing her photographs.

"I am her elder brother. We have recognised her. Back in Pakistan, she has also recognised the photographs of our father and the family. Had it not been so, the government officials wouldn't have approached us," said Balram Mahato, Jagannath Mahato's eldest son.

In the village, recordings of Pakistani news channels, narrating Geeta's story, are played out on loudspeakers at the river bank and at the local temple.

Villager KP Sharma, 70, says many residents leave the village to work in other parts of the country because they have no opportunities at home.

_86292799_img_5149.jpg

Image caption"We hope Geeta brings us luck. Maybe we can get a bridge over the river to connect us to the rest of Bihar," say the villagers
"We have nothing here as you can see - no power, no clean drinking water, no roads, no medical care. The village has seen mass migration. This is the reason that Geeta and her husband migrated to Punjab. Most villagers work as farm labourers in different parts of the country."

"We hope Geeta brings us luck. Maybe we can get a bridge over the river to connect us to the rest of Bihar. Maybe we'll get electricity since so many journalists are visiting us now," another villager said.

Geeta: Indian village awaits return of 'mystery girl' - BBC News
 
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Whatever....now she has to live in India..and we shouldn't let her enter Pakistan again
 
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Couldn't they have done the DNA test already?
Strange news.
 
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