However, according to India, Sarabjit was a farmer who strayed into Pakistan from his village located on the border, three months after the bombings.
^ "Rs 1 crore assistance to Sarabjit's family, 3-day state mourning in Punjab". Samay Live. 2 May 2013. ^ "Two new posters of 'Sarbjit' out!". ABP Live.
^ "Sarabjit's skull was broken into two pieces". Hindustan Times. 4 May 2013. Retrieved 5 May 2013. ^ "Rs 1 crore assistance to Sarabjit's family, 3-day state mourning in Punjab". Samay Live. 2 May 2013. ^ "Two new posters of 'Sarbjit' out!". ABP Live. Retrieved 16 May 2016. ^ Priya Gupta (4 June 2015).
The makers of Sarbjit recovered the total budget ₹23 crore (US$3.3 million) including production and marketing/promotional costs and made ₹9 crore (US$1.3 million) profit via sales of theatrical-Satellite-music-home video rights even before the release.
lawyer Awais SheikhLahore: Pakistani lawyer Awais Sheikh, who defended Indian prisoner Sarabjit Singh, have taken asylum in Sweden with his family after receiving threats, his colleagues and friends said.
After a brief trial in the Lahore High Court (later directed to the Supreme Court), he was condemned and sentenced to death in 1991, but the sentence was repeatedly postponed by the Government of Pakistan.
Dalbir Kaur, sister of Sarabjit Singh – the Indian prisoner who was fatally attacked by inmates in Pakistan jail in 2013 – died late on Saturday. Dalbir Kaur, who was suffering from asthma, died in a private hospital where she was admitted due to shortness of breath. She was cremated at Bhikhivid on Sunday.
They (Pakistan) got freed (Pakistani citizen Dr Khalil) Chishti and you (India) released their other prisoners,” she said. Sarabjit's wife Sukhpreet Kaur, daughters Poonam and Swapandeep Kaur and sister Dalbir crossed over into India from Lahore through the land border.
Noted Pakistani lawyer Awais Sheikh (67), who was the counsel for Indian national Sarabjit Singh who was killed in a Pakistani jail in 2013, passed away in Sweden on Monday.
May 2, 2013Sarabjit Singh / Date of death
Dalbir KaurSarabjit Singh / Sister
New Delhi: Sarabjit Singh, his family says, strayed across the border in Punjab into Pakistan one night in 1990. 23 years later, his body was flown back in a special plane that landed in Amritsar this evening. It was a tragic homecoming.
On August 15, 1991, he was held guilty and sentenced to be hanged. But for so many years, they neither released him nor hanged him despite my making so many appeals and requests for his forgiveness, even though he had committed no crime.
Notably, Sarabjit Singh had strayed into Pakistan in 1990 in an inebriated condition and was arrested by Pakistan Rangers who handed him over to Pak police. The Pakistan police had slapped different cases of bomb explosions and spying on him.
August 28, 1990: Sarabjit Singh was arrested by Pakistani border guards from the Indo-Pak border in an inebriated state. His wife claimed he had gone to work on his fields near the Wagah border and had not returned. Though he was initially charged with illegally crossing into Pakistan, he was later charged with involvement in the four bombings in Faisalabad and Lahore that caused the death of 14 people.
Sarbjit was killed in Lahore’s Kot Lakhpat jail. Sheikh was a known counsel of Indian prisoners in Pakistan and fought Sarabjit’s case for four years from 2010 till the Indian prisoner’s death in 2013.
Bollywood actor and activist Raza Murad also campaigned for his release. As of June 2012, he had collected 138,226 signatures in support of Singh's release. After the Pakistani government's reversal regarding his release in June 2012, Murad intensified his 'Free Sarabjit' campaign.
Sarabjeet was caught on an unmarked Indo-Pakistani border area in Pakistan and arrested by the Pakistan Rangers near Kasur. Singh and his supporters claimed that the arrest was a case of mistaken identity and that he was only a poor farmer who was drunk and had strayed over the border.
After a year they received a letter from Singh, informing them that he had been arrested in Pakistan as Manjit Singh, as he had no identification papers and had been charged by the Lahore police in the bombings. He was convicted of spying and carrying out the bombings and was given the death penalty.
The film was narrated through the perspective of Sarbjit Singh's sister Dalbir Kaur and was released on 20 May 2016 in India; the Censor board of Pakistan banned the film for being "anti-Pakistani".
They announced that the release order had been for another prisoner, Surjeet Singh, who was pardoned in 1989. Sarabjit's family condemned the incident as a "cruel joke". Singh filed a new mercy appeal to the President of Pakistan on the 65th independence day of that country.
However, according to India, Sarabjit was a farmer who strayed into Pakistan from his village located on the border, three months after the bombings.
The authorities claimed that he was 'Manjit Singh' and had been responsible for the four blasts which killed 14 people, and had been arrested while returning to India after carrying out the bombings. He was accused of working for the Indian Research and Analysis Wing intelligence agency.
The makers of Sarbjit recovered the total budget ₹230 million (US$3.2 million) including production and marketing/promotional costs and made ₹90 million (US$1.3 million) profit via sales of theatrical-Satellite-music-home video rights even before the release.
Despite being innocent, he was 22 years in prison in Pakistan and died badly. Richa Chadda and Darshan Kumar play supporting roles. Made on a production budget of ₹ 15 crore and marketed at ₹ 8 crore, Sarbjit premiered at the 69th Cannes Film Festival and was released on 20 May 2016 to mixed reactions from critics.
In 1990, after becoming drunk, Sarbjit accidentally crosses the border and arrives in Pakistan, where he is convicted as an Indian spy. He is alleged as Ranjit Singh, and accused of causing bomb blasts in Lahore.
Rajeev Masand also gave 3 stars to the film and stated "In many ways Sarbjit feels half-baked and wanting. But the performances – particularly Randeep Hooda's – keeps you invested in what's on the screen. It's not a perfect film, but there is enough to appreciate here".
Sarbjit Singh ( Randeep Hooda) lives in Bhikhiwind, Punjab with his wife Sukhpreet ( Richa Chadda ), their two daughters Poonam (Ankita Shrivastav) and Swapandeep ( Shiwani Saini) and his father Darji. He works as a farmer and is a loving younger brother.
The film features Aishwarya Rai as Dalbir Kaur and Randeep Hooda portrays the title role Sarabjit Singh, an Indian man who was sentenced to death by the Supreme Court of Pakistan in 1991 and who consequently spent 22 years in prison for alleged terrorism and spying.
Randeep's stellar performance may earn him loads of accolades and respect as an actor. Rai Bachchan convincingly portrays Dalbir's ordeal through her role.