Pakistan on Friday freed 45 Indian fishermen as a gesture of goodwill, but confusion surrounded their release, as Indian authorities here were not informed about it.
The fishermen were freed from a jail in Karachi and put on a bus that will take them to the eastern city of Lahore. However, official sources said Pakistani authorities had not formally informed the Indian High Commission about their release.
The verification of the identity of several of the fishermen has not been completed while others had not completed their jail terms, the sources told PTI.
Several formalities have to be completed before the fishermen can be allowed to cross over to India via the Wagah land border crossing on Saturday, the sources said. "If these formalities aren't completed, the prisoners can't cross over," a source said.
Footage on television showed the fishermen coming out of Malir Jail in Karachi and boarding the bus.
On May 7, caretaker Prime Minister Mir Hazar Khan Khoso announced that Pakistan would release 51 Indian fishermen who have already completed their jail terms. The figure was subsequently revised to 49 and later, 45 fishermen were freed.
India and Pakistan frequently arrest fishermen for illegally crossing the maritime boundary. There are currently 482 Indian prisoners in Pakistani jails while 496 Pakistanis are in Indian jails.
When Khoso announced the release of the Indian fishermen, he expressed the hope that the Indian government would reciprocate by freeing Pakistani prisoners.
The move to release the prisoners came after Indian death row prisoner Sarabjit Singh died in Lahore on May 2 following a brutal assault within Kot Lakhpat Jail. Following his death, Pakistani prisoner Sanaullah Ranjay was assaulted in a jail in Jammu and died later in a hospital in Chandigarh.