New Delhi: Two Sufi clerics of the Hazrat Nizamuddin Dargah in Delhi, who had gone missing in Pakistan last week, blamed a Pakistani newspaper for publishing a misleading article that had led to their ordeal. The duo arrived at the Indira Gandhi International Airport on Monday and went to pay obeisance at the shrine where they spoke to media.
They are scheduled to meet external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj at 2pm.
Syed Asif Nizami, 82, and Nazim Ali Nizami, 66, are members of the family of the Sajjada Nashin (hereditary administrators) of the shrine. Officials of home ministry met the two clerics after they returned to Delhi on Monday.
Asif Nizami said that Ummat a Pakistani publication by Jamat e-islami had allegedly carried a misleading report about them and indicated that it had landed them in trouble. Pakistani newspapers carried a report saying Nizamis are working for Indian intelligence agency, said Sajid Nizami, son of Asif Nizami.
Asif Nizami, the head priest, and his nephew Nazim Nizami had gone on pilgrimage to Pakistan on March 8. They were reported missing on Thursday (March 16) after their families were unable to contact them.
On Saturday, Swaraj had spoken to Pakistan Prime Ministers adviser on foreign affairs, Sartaj Aziz, regarding the case. Later in the day, Pakistan conveyed to India that the two missing clerics had been traced and that they had reached Karachi.
On Sunday, external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj spoke to them. I just spoke to Syed Nazim Ali Nizami in Karachi. He told me that they are safe and will be back in Delhi tomorrow (Monday), she said in a tweet.
According to media reports in Pakistan, the clerics had been in interior Sindh where there was no communication network and thus could not inform their relatives about their whereabouts.
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