A 52-year-old woman from Punjab, earlier reported missing during a Sikh pilgrimage to Pakistan, has been found to have voluntarily stayed back, changed her name and married a Pakistani man.<br /><br />Sarabjit Kaur, a resident of Amainipur in Kapurthala district, had travelled with a jatha of 1,932 pilgrims through the Attari border on 4 November for the birth anniversary of Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji. While the group returned after 10 days, Sarabjit did not come back.<br /><br />During the probe, Indian agencies discovered that she had married a Pakistani national, Nasir Hussain, and adopted the name Noor Hussain. Her Nikahnama confirmed the development.<br /><br />Authorities also found that Sarabjit left key details like nationality and passport number blank in her Pakistani immigration form, making her difficult to trace.<br /><br />Sarabjit, divorced and facing past NDPS-related cases along with her two sons, had reportedly planned the move in advance. When Punjab Police visited her village, the family offered no details.<br /><br />The case has raised serious questions about how she was allowed to travel alone, despite earlier restrictions after a similar 2018 incident involving Kiran Bala. The role of the Pakistani High Commission and oversight by SGPC is also under scrutiny.<br /><br />#PunjabNews #PakistanPilgrimage #SarabjitKaur #NoorHussain #SecurityLapse #CrossBorderMarriage #VisaControversy #PunjabPolice #SGPC #BreakingNews
