A five-month-old Pakistani boy, who was promised medical treatment by Indian external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj after his father tweeted about not being able to get a visa, is going home following a successful surgery in a hospital in Noida. The minister said since PoK is an integral part of India which has been illegally occupied by Pakistan, India will grant the medical visa and that no letter was required for it. Pak has illegally occupied it. But when Aziz did not show courtesy to acknowledge a letter written personally by Swaraj to him for giving visa to Indian national Avantika Jadhav, who wants to meet her son in Pakistan, she took this step.
Her tweet came after Osama Ali, a resident of PoK sought medical visa for treatment in Delhi for a liver tumour.
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As reported by Indian Express, after the Pakistan Foreign Affairs Ministry had turned down Osama Ali's request for a letter from Aziz to the Indian High Commission, his family had appealed to Swaraj to revoke the requirement. "No letter required", Sushma Swaraj said. Her move was aimed at re-assering New Delhi's position that the entire state of Jammu and Kashmir, including the area under illegal occupation of Pakistan, was an integral part of India.
"I have my sympathies for all Pakistan nationals seeking medical visa for their treatment in India. "All that we require is his (Aziz) recommendation for the grant of medical visa to Pakistan nationals", Swaraj posted on Twitter". "India has always been generous with visas to Pakistani patients seeking treatment in India, and has never shut down this humanitarian window even in the worst of times in bilateral relations".



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