Deplorable: Iconic Humanitarian Abdul Sattar Edhi Facing Deportation From US, Passport Siezed

Posted on January 29, 2008
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Foreign Relations, Law & Justice, People
86 Comments
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Adil Najam

Hassan Abbas from WatanDost just alerted me to this most deplorable and shocking news. According to the Daily Times:

Renowned social worker Abdul Sattar Edhi was interrogated by US immigration officials at the JF Kennedy Airport in New York, who also seized his passport and other documents, a private TV channel reported on Monday. Edhi told Geo News that US immigration officials had questioned him for eight hours at the airport. “They asked me why I don’t reside permanently in the US despite having a green card,” he said. “I told them that I’m a social worker and I have to travel extensively around the world, and so cannot live there permanently,” he added.



Edhi said he had faced the same behaviour from US immigration officials when he visited America in June last year. According to Geo News, the immigration officials allowed him to leave following the intervention of Pakistani officials, but did not return his passport and other documents. Edhi said the US officials, through a letter, had also asked him to appear in court for a hearing on February 20. Separately, talking to News One television channel, Edhi said US authorities apparently wanted to hinder his social work. He said he, his wife and their granddaughter had been living in a small room for the last month as the US authorities were refusing to return his passport.

In an earlier news story, Dawn had reported:

US authorities have threatened Pakistan’s most respected citizen Abdul Sattar Edhi with deportation, he said. “I just received a telephone call from someone, telling me that I am being deported,” Mr Edhi, who is now in New York told Dawn. He said he was stopped at the airport in London when he tried to board a plane for New York on Jan 8.

Mr Edhi then contacted the US Embassy in London who gave him a letter which allowed him to proceed to New York. The letter also advised him to see US authorities on Feb 18 to clear whatever misunderstandings they may have about him. Mr Edhi arrived in New York on Jan 9 and was detained at the airport for eight hours. “They were questioning me why I look the way I look,” said Mr Edhi who has a long beard and always wears traditional Pakistani dress along with a traditional cap.

“They also wanted to know why I visit the United States so regularly,” he said. “I told them I am a social worker. What else I do? I only do social work,” said Mr Edhi who has branches of his trust in several US cities. “If they do not let me work here, I will work somewhere else.”

ATP know of my reveration – aqeedat – for the amazing humanitarian work that Abdul Sattar Edhi does (also see here, here and here).

Indeed, this admiration is shared not only by many other Pakistanis but by so many around the world who follow daily miracles that Edhi Foundation performs in some of the most telling places in the world. A look at the over 250 comments on my post about him which suggested that he should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize is testimony to this admiration, indeed devotion.

Here are excerpts from what I had written then; events since then have again highlighted just how important a human treasure he is not just to Pakistan but to the world:

Here is a man who has dedicated his whole life to serving the most marginalized and the most wretched in society. The destitutes, the mentally ill, corpses left by the roadside, children abandoned at his doorsteps, women kicked out by their families. When there is no one to go to, there is always Edhi Sahib to go to.

As importantly, he has done this – in his words – ‘wholesale’. He has single handedly built – literally by begging – a social services structure at a national scale. Bigger than what governments have. He has never taken a ruppee as salary himself. He lives in a two room apartment that most middle class Pakistanis would not call home and he oversees the largest ambulance network in the world, now with airplanes and helicopters, a multi-million dollar enterprise of relief, of goodwill, and of humanitarianism. If he does not deserve the Nobel Award, I do not know who does.

The Nobel Peace Prize has not come yet. But this humiliation has. Deplorable.

86 responses to “Deplorable: Iconic Humanitarian Abdul Sattar Edhi Facing Deportation From US, Passport Siezed”

  1. Wils says:

    What does one do if 95% pakistanis have Jihadi connection, Western nations need to protect their borders, no one intends to be disrespectful, we are being only protective.

  2. D_a_n says:

    @ zindagi ki Diary…

    There is NO rule that you have reside permanently in the states….if you know otherwise then please elaborate….if not, then Id advise you to disown comment of yours…..

    I cannot seriously believe that someone…that too a pakistani would ever in any way condone or even ‘try to understand’ this treatment meted out to the BEST amongst the populace of this sorry dominion that is our home…

    for shame! for shame!

  3. Actually, I think Edhi is at fault.

    With Green Card, he is suppose to show that he intends to live

  4. Adil Najam says:

    Update, from The News:

    ISLAMABAD: The government has taken a stern and serious view of the treatment meted out to renowned social worker Abdul Sattar Edhi, who was interrogated in the US and his travelling documents taken away.

    The Foreign Office says that it is in touch with the US authorities on the matter who have held out an assurance that they would get back to the government. The entire country has been shocked by the uncalled for action by the US authorities, which have shown no regard for this aging icon, whose only aim in life is to help the sick and needy.

    But in a country where a presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton thinks that President Pervez Musharraf is taking part in the parliamentary elections next month, how can ordinary US immigration staff be aware of Abdul Sattar Edhi.

    President Pervez Musharraf in one of his meetings with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice during a visit to Washington some time back had raised the issue of the continuing harassment that Abdul Sattar Edhi faced each time he entered the US. Edhi has centres in the US as well.

    “The issue that has surfaced right now has a background. Each time Edhi went to the US he was asked to wait for hours for special security clearance. Rice had assured Musharraf that this would end and for quite a few visits Edhi had smooth sailing. But lately this has started again”, western diplomatic sources told ‘The News’.

    But on January 9 the same exercise was repeated and Pakistan’s missions in Washington and New York held meetings with State Department and other concerned departments. Another meeting also took place on Monday and yet another one is expected on Thursday.

    “There was report of fire in one of the Edhi Centres in Karachi and Edhi wanted to return. But his green card was to be re-examined by the US authorities on February 20. Edhi sources say that he had told the US authorities to give him an early date as his documents are in order. Now the US authorities have told the Pakistan government that they would meet them on Thursday.

    Interestingly, the Foreign Office, unlike in the past, has not issued any formal statement on the matter but, instead, the spokesperson has been talking to media persons who have contacted him.

  5. Daktar says:

    I must say that many of the comments here are quite petty and sad. Seems like little concern about Edhi Sahib and his stature and trying to score cheap points about whatever one’s hobby horse is. But most funny are comments from people (at least some of whom from previous comments are themselves Pakistanis living abroad) about how pathetic Pakistanis abroad (i.e., they themselves) are! All these Najoomi types seem to know exactly what other Pakistanis abroad (like themselves) would NOT do. Wow. Speak about self-importance and arrogance, these guys can read other’s minds.

    But most sad is that for all of this big talk most comments seem to be about making cheap political points rather than commenting on why a great man was treated so shabbily.

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