[Reader-list] UK National ID card cloned in 12 minutes

Murali V murali.chalam at gmail.com
Sat Aug 8 16:29:34 IST 2009


POK as such does not fall within the framework of Indian boundaries as per
the internationally accepted definitions of Countries.
The definition comes to those which are under the direct control of the
Govt. of India. Please do let me know if POK comes under the direct control
of the Indian Govt.
Those born outside India and have citizenship of the country of birth and
also those who have given up the Indian citizenship and taken up the
citizenship of their country of domicile shall also not come under the
definition of Bhumi Putra. They may at best, if given dual citizenship shall
hold an NRI status.
Regards,
V Murali

On Sat, Aug 8, 2009 at 3:16 PM, Taha Mehmood <2tahamehmood at googlemail.com>wrote:

> Dear Murali,
>
> Thanks for the clarification. I will keep this definition of yours in
> mind, for all future conversations. I hope you are clear, in what you
> have thought.
>
> Warm regards
>
> Taha
>
> PS: Just wondering, if according to you, Bhumiputra refers to, 'Born
> in the land mass called India with the defined boundaries ', then,
> should all persons born in a land mass of India also known as Pakistan
> occupied Kashmir be entitled to  UIDC, MNIC, Passports etc?They seem
> to be bhumiputras according to your definition.
>
> OR
>
> Should all those persons of Indian parentage who were born outside
> India, maybe because their parents were working abroad be denied such
> facilities, like citizenship,because, they are not born in the land
> mass called India with the defined boundaries?
>


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