


Lahore, Nov 27, 2018 : Punjab minister Navjot Singh Sidhu’s hug to Pakistan’s army chief during his visit to Pakistan for the swearing-in of Prime Minister Imran Khan in August had stirred up a storm back home. The gesture could have been avoided, many said, but Mr Sidhu had played it down saying it was just a "jhappi" (hug). The cricketer-turned-politician, who is again travelling to Pakistan for the ground-breaking ceremony of Kartarpur Sahib corridor, reiterated that it was just a hug and "not the Rafale deal".

As per NDTV reports "It was a  second-long hug. It’s very common in Punjab. When two Punjabis meet, if  they want to express gratitude, they hug each other emotionally. It is a  way to show warmth and affection," Mr Sidhu told reporters in Lahore.
But his response left many wondering "why would you thank the Pakistan army chief".
His  decision to attend the ground-breaking ceremony had already upset his  boss Amarinder Singh, who had turned down Islamabad’s invite over terror  attacks in Pathankot and recently Amritsar.
While criticising Mr  Sidhu’s "way of thinking", Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder had said,  "The man (Sidhu) should understand that our soldiers are being killed  every day. My own regiment lost one major and two jawans a few months  ago," Amarinder Singh had said.
But Mr Sidhu defended his decision saying "religion unites and it should not be seen through the eyes of politics".
"The  centre hasn’t objected to my visit, nobody said kintu, parantu (ifs and  buts). In fact I was encouraged to go. I have come here as a messenger  of peace. This is an opportunity to erase enmity between the two  nations," Mr Sidhu said.
Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj, who was  also invited to attend the ceremony, has instead sent two of her  colleagues -- union ministers Harsimrat Kaur Badal and Hardeep Singh  Puri.
Navjot Singh Sidhu was received at the Wagah border by Pakistan officials this afternoon.
Terming  Kartarpur as a "corridor of infinite possibilities", Punjab Mr Sidhu  said that such initiative would also enhance connectivity and promote  trade. The four-km link will provide visa-free access to the Indian Sikh  pilgrims to the gurdwara.
Mr Sidhu, who crossed the Attari-Wagah  border this afternoon, credited Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan  for "making the corridor possible" and said, "The wait of 73 years is  over. The seed Imran Khan had sown three months ago has become a plant.  It is a happy moment for the Sikh community."
Kartarpur Sahib,  where Guru Nanak is believed to have spent the last 18 years of his  life, is situated in Narowal district of Pakistan’s Punjab province. For  many years now, Sikh devotees have been demanding that governments of  both the countries to build a corridor linking it with the Dera Baba  Nanak in Punjab’s Gurdaspur district.
The centre approved the corridor last week and sent a communique to the Pakistan government, urging it to reciprocate.
The  Pakistan government agreed to open the Kartarpur Corridor on Guru  Nanak’s 550th birth anniversary. Prime Minister Imran Khan will lay the  foundation stone tomorrow.