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Pakistan trained doctor sells shoes in Ahmedabad

agamdilawari

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AHMEDABAD: In 2001, Dashrath Kela, 38, started his career as a doctor with a monthly salary of Rs 25,000. Nine years later, he is a shop assistant at his cousin's shoe store in Maninagar, earning Rs 15,000 a month.

Kela is an MBBS from Karachi University. He fled to Ahmedabad in 2006 fearing for the safety of his family. He can't practice medicine here until he gets a certificate from the Medical Council of India (MCI). There are around 200 such Pakistani doctors in Gujarat - mostly from Sindh - who have the skill to heal but their hands are tied by red tape and uncertainty on citizenship.

Without the MCI's permission to practice, these doctors often work in pharmacies or even mobile repair shops - all for a pittance. Some also work the graveyard shift in hospitals offering their services as "charity" because they can't be hired legally.

Most of the Pakistani doctors fled to Gujarat for safety. They say kidnapping of girls from the Hindu community settled there, as well as extortion by anti-social elements, was common place. A large Sindhi population in Ahmedabad made the relocation that much easier.

"In Pakistan, patients used to treat us like gods. Here we are forced to beg for jobs to stay alive," says Dr Jayram Lohana, 46, who used to earn Rs 1 lakh a month in Sindh before he came to India in 2012. In Ahmedabad, he works at his cousin's mobile store right next to the airport. "We escaped terrorists and found safety here, but nobody is willing to help us put our lives back on track," he says.

READ ALSO: Gujarat government willing to employ Pak doctors

Lohana now offers 'sewa' in a charitable hospital for Rs 20,000 a month. He had applied for the job of a medical officer in rural areas and his application was forwarded by the state government to MCI, which declined to certify him as he is not an Indian citizen.

"A foreign-educated doctor has to obtain Indian citizenship and clear the mandatory screening test to practice in India," says MCI chairman Dr Jayshree Mehta. Very few of these doctors have Indian citizenship, much as they would like to get it. They stay on long-term visas, renewable every year, which prohibit them from taking jobs.

As per the rules, Pakistanis can apply for Indian citizenship after staying here for seven years. The process takes another two to three years and then one encounters the red tape at MCI. Dr Girdharilal Sinchani, 42, knows it all too well. He did his MBBS from Karachi in 1997 and came to India in 2001. He got citizenship in February 2014 but has been waiting for MCI approval for the past 14 months. "We came here hoping for a better life, but while there is safety, we can't get jobs or buy property to live or do business."


Pakistan trained doctor sells shoes in Ahmedabad - The Times of India
 
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im sure second genration of pakistani hindu refugees will be more sucsessful in india .... pakistans loss is indias gain :)
 
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MCI should screen & permit them to practice in remote areas atleast..... I hope their plight will end soon.....
 
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None of our concern if they become sweeper sell shoes or become toilet cleaner they are indian citizen now.
 
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He should practice Vedic medicine, India doesn't take rest of the world standards for medical education.

Vedic medicine is around 8000 years old and can cure every disease from AIDS to Cancer...


Yet stopping persecution of minorities in Pakistan and fleeing of Pakistani Hindus & Sikhs to India are among few things even vedic medicine can't stop !!

None of our concern if they become sweeper sell shoes or become toilet cleaner they are indian citizen now.


They are not....that's why most of them are not able to practice medicine and thus doing those odd jobs.
 
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"And hence once a great defence forum now lay ruins. Hail the Trolls from the East and Sleeping Mods of the sacred city."
-A sad PDF member-
 
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Yet stopping persecution of minorities in Pakistan and fleeing of Pakistani Hindus & Sikhs to India are among few things even vedic medicine can't stop !!




They are not....that's why most of them are not able to practice medicine and thus doing those odd jobs.


Some odd 1000 Hindus aren't exactly indicative of the whole population of Hindus and Sikhs in Pakistan.

In fact, the Hindu population is growing the fastest in Pakistan than any other country in the world. In 2050, Hindus will share a massive part of the population in Pakistan, mostly in Sindh
 
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Maybe some one should tell these Indians about the paradise back home so in desperation they don't litter streets here in UK.

 
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