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'People on both sides of border are same'

October 03, 2006 13:57 IST

The show of strength at the retreat ceremony in Wagah/Attari between India and Pakistan may be a routine for 15-year-old Gurbachan Singh, but he still considers the people on both sides of the border to be "equal" in every sense of the word and says the manmade divide is futile and the exercise in vain.

"On both sides of the border the people lead the same life, their outlook is the same and I find no difference between us," he asserted.

While busy selling CDs of the retreat to tourists, who come from every nook and cranny of the country, he makes a fast buck by selling 6-7 of them everyday after the school, the prices of which vary between Rs 30-50 depending upon the haggling.

Gurbachan, fondly called 'Happy' by his family and friends, unabashedly says Railway Minister Lalu Prasad Yadav was the first prime minister of India.

Though he may be ignorant about the railway minister, his knowledge about the prime minister is not erroneous as he is aware that the PM is none other than Manmohan Singh.

Asked how certain he is about the PM, pat comes the reply, "He belongs to our (Sikh) community and I am proud, he is at the helm of the affairs of the country."

A ninth standard student, like his other peers, he enjoys meeting tourists pouring in Wagah/Attari from various places and aquaint them with the exercise carried out on the border in his Hindi laced with chaste Punjabi, though hardly understood by many.

Also, unlike any other trouble-torn border sharing between the two countries, he says the atmosphere is more or less sedate and equable due to a large posse of Border Security Force personnel and hence the palpable tension in the air never percolates to them.

Gurbachan cherishes the hope that one day the border would open to all and will not be restricted to carriers of visas only.

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