Pakistan said on Thursday that it has issued a visa to cricketer-turned politician Navjot Singh Sidhu to attend the inauguration of the much-awaited Kartarpur corridor on November 9.
The Pakistan government invited Punjab Congress leader Sidhu - who also attended the groundbreaking ceremony of the Kartarpur Corridor - to attend Saturday's inauguration.
A ruling party spokesperson had said that Sidhu, a personal friend of Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan since old cricketing days, accepted the invitation.
"Sidhu has been issued a visa and we will warmly welcome him on the opening ceremony," Foreign Office spokesperson Mohammad Faisal said during his weekly media briefing here.
Meanwhile, Sidhu was given political clearance by the government of India on Thursday to take part in the Kartarpur corridor inauguration ceremony on the Pakistani side on Saturday, official sources said in New Delhi.
Sidhu had sought permission from the external affairs ministry to attend the event following an invitation by Pakistan Prime Minister Khan.
He had come under fire from the opposition after he hugged Pakistan Army chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa during the swearing-in ceremony of Prime Minister Imran Khan in August last year. Sidhu had then claimed that Gen Bajwa had told him about "making efforts to open the Kartarpur corridor".
The passport waiver for Kartarpur pilgrims would extend up to one year as a special gesture on the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev, Faisal said.
Pakistan has also waived the USD 20 service charge per pilgrim per visit on November 9 and November 12, he said, adding that it has also waived the requirement of 10-day advance intimation for the mega ceremony.
Faisal said Pakistan hoped a massive inflow of Sikh pilgrims from all over the world during the ceremony.
He said the promotion of Hindu and Buddhist sacred sites situated inside Pakistan was also under consideration as the country was a cradle of ancient civilizations for centuries.
Rejecting the reports linking Pakistan's efforts on Kartarpur corridor to encouraging Khalistan movement, Faisal said, "There was no such negativity in our policy."
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