The Supreme Court on Wednesday allowed on
"humanitarian grounds" the entry of a pregnant woman and her
eight-year-old child into India, months after they were pushed into Bangladesh.
A bench of Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justice
Joymalya Bagchi asked the West Bengal government to take care of the minor and
directed the chief medical officer of Birbhum district to provide all possible
medical assistance to the pregnant woman Sunali Khatun.
The bench noted the submission of Solicitor General
Tushar Mehta, appearing for the Centre, that the competent authority has agreed
to allow the woman and her child into the country purely on humanitarian
grounds and they would be kept under surveillance.
The top court said they would eventually be brought
back to Delhi from where they were picked up and deported to Bangladesh.
Senior advocates Kapil Sibal and Sanjay Hegde urged
the court that there were others also, including Sunali's husband who are in
Bangladesh and need to be brought back to India for which Mehta may seek
further instruction.
Mehta contended that he would be contesting their
claim of being Indian citizens and maintained that they were Bangladeshi
nationals and it was only humanitarian grounds that the union government was
allowing the woman and her child into India.
The woman's father alleged that the families,
working as daily wage earners in Sector 26 of the Rohini area in Delhi for over
two decades, were picked up by police on June 18 on suspicion of being
Bangladeshis and subsequently pushed across the border on June 27.