On Thursday, Pakistan said it would take up with India the issue of about 50 students from Lahore being sent back following the beheading of two Indian soldiers, and criticised New Delhi for being "a silent spectator".
Delhi-based NGO ‘Routes2Roots’ had invited the Pakistani students as part of their student "Exchange for Change" Programme.
They were sent back on Wednesday after the government advised the NGO against hosting them, saying the time was not "appropriate" for such exchanges.
Pakistan Foreign Office Spokesperson Nafees Zakaria blamed hardliners for India's move to send back the students:
He said Pakistan would take up the matter with the Indian government.
The students of Lahore Grammar School International were sent back on Wednesday after the beheading of Naib Subedar Paramjeet Singh and BSF Head Constable Prem Sagar by Pakistan's Border Action Team (BAT) on 1 May.
This abrupt end to their trip prevented the students from not only seeing the Taj Mahal, but also stopped them from meeting the students of Delhi’s Tagore International School.
The Indian and Pakistani students had been communicating with each other for over a year. They had been writing letters and exchanging postcards for a year, and this India visit was a culmination of that friendship.
This is not the first time that such a visit is being cancelled. Earlier, a similar trip by these students scheduled for October 2016 had been postponed in the aftermath of the surgical strikes by India.
(With inputs from PTI.)
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