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Asked to remove all our clothes including turbans… mentally tortured: US deportee from Punjab

Close to midnight on Saturday, Jaswinder was among the second batch of Indian nationals deported by the US. It was only when he reached Amritsar airport that he was able to wear his turban again.

The third US military aircraft carrying 112 illegal Indian immigrants at the Amritsar airport on Sunday night. Of the 112 deportees, 44 are from Haryana, 33 from Gujarat, 31 from Punjab, two from UP and one each from Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh. (Rana Simranjit Singh)The third US military aircraft carrying 112 illegal Indian immigrants at the Amritsar airport on Sunday night. Of the 112 deportees, 44 are from Haryana, 33 from Gujarat, 31 from Punjab, two from UP and one each from Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh. (Rana Simranjit Singh)

Jaswinder Singh, 21, from Pandori Arian village of Dharamkot in Moga district, started his illegal journey to the US after selling his family’s 1.5 kila of land and mortgaging their two-room house. The family even had to sell their buffaloes to raise Rs 44 lakh, which they paid to an agent to get Jaswinder to the US.

Close to midnight on Saturday, Jaswinder was among the second batch of Indian nationals deported by the US. It was only when he reached Amritsar airport that he was able to wear his turban again—nearly 20 days after being detained by US authorities upon crossing the US-Mexico border illegally on January 27.

Speaking to The Indian Express, Jaswinder said, “As soon as I was detained on January 27 and taken to the detention centre, they asked me to remove all my clothes, including my turban. We were allowed to wear only a T-shirt, a lower, socks, and shoes. They also removed our shoelaces. I and other Sikh youths asked them to at least return our turbans, but they refused. They said, ‘Who will be responsible if any of you hangs self to death?’ For all the days we were at the detention centre, we were not allowed to wear a turban. It was only after reaching Amritsar airport that I got my luggage back and wrapped my head with a parna (a cloth worn by Sikh men to cover their heads).”

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Jaswinder Singh, US deportees, indian express Jaswinder Singh was among the second batch of Indian nationals deported by the US. (Express Photo)

Jaswinder said he wanted to go to the US to support his family, as his father was a heart patient and could no longer work. “Now we are under a debt of Rs 44 lakh and have no idea how we will repay it. We even mortgaged our house,” said Jaswinder, a Class 10 pass, who left home in December last year and first landed in Prague, Czech Republic, from Delhi before reaching the US-Mexico border via Spain, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Mexico.

“I reached the border on January 26, but since it was raining heavily, my agent made me cross on January 27. I was caught within minutes. My agent had also promised that once I was detained, he would bail me out of the detention centre, but he never fulfilled this promise. Now I want my money back. The Punjab government should make him return it,” he said.

Alleging “mental torture” in the detention centre and on the US military plane that ferried them back to Amritsar, Jaswinder said, “On the flight, our hands and feet were chained. We boarded the plane on January 13, and for nearly three days, we were inside without knowing where we were being taken. If anyone stood up even for a minute to stretch, the US authorities on board would reprimand us and order us to sit down. We shivered in the cold, as we were given only plastic sheets, which were not enough in the biting cold.”

“Now I don’t have any money to go abroad again, either to the US or anywhere else. I want my money back from the agent,” said Jaswinder, who has four siblings to support.

Divya Goyal is a Principal Correspondent with The Indian Express, based in Punjab. Her interest lies in exploring both news and feature stories, with an effort to reflect human interest at the heart of each piece. She writes on gender issues, education, politics, Sikh diaspora, heritage, the Partition among other subjects. She has also extensively covered issues of minority communities in Pakistan and Afghanistan. She also explores the legacy of India's partition and distinct stories from both West and East Punjab. She is a gold medalist from the Indian Institute of Mass Communication (IIMC), Delhi, the most revered government institute for media studies in India, from where she pursued English Journalism (Print). Her research work on “Role of micro-blogging platform Twitter in content generation in newspapers” had won accolades at IIMC. She had started her career in print journalism with Hindustan Times before switching to The Indian Express in 2012. Her investigative report in 2019 on gender disparity while treating women drug addicts in Punjab won her the Laadli Media Award for Gender Sensitivity in 2020. She won another Laadli for her ground report on the struggle of two girls who ride a boat to reach their school in the border village of Punjab.       ... Read More

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