Living on the edge, Pakistani Hindus still feel safer in India


  • World
  • Wednesday, 17 Jun 2020

Shyam and Geeta's family and friends sit around a bonfire as they sing songs at their wedding, outside makeshift huts that were built using wood collected from surrounding trees, at a Hindu refugee settlement situated amongst a woodland area near Signature Bridge, a highway overpass in New Delhi, India, January 21, 2020. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Seven years ago, Dharamveer Solanki, a Hindu, left his home in Pakistan’s Hyderabad city, never to return. When his train crossed the border into India, Solanki said he felt happier than ever before.

"It felt as though I had been reborn,” he said, sitting inside a bustling refugee colony on the outskirts of New Delhi, where he and hundreds of other Hindus who fled Muslim-majority Pakistan have built a new home.

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