Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Tuesday slammed Pakistan for demanding $20 as service charge from Indian pilgrims, saying it amounted to issuing a "ticket" to visit the historic gurdwara in Kartarpur in the neighbouring country.
Pointing out that devotees would be placing ''chadawa'' (offerings) at the gurdwara of their own volition anyway, Amarinder Singh said Sikhism propounds ''khulle darshan'', an ideology that Pakistan seemed bent on violating.
Last month, Amarinder Singh had equated the service charge to "jaziya" (a tax on non-Muslims).
"It is tantamount to putting a ticket on visiting the gurdwara. How will the poor pilgrims pay this amount," he asked.
The Punjab government, said Amarinder Singh, was working closely with the Centre to ensure that all infrastructure-related and other works for the Kartarpur Corridor are completed well in time.
He hoped that Pakistan too would meet its promised deadline to make the 550th ''Prakash Purb'' truly historic for the Sikh community.
Amarinder Singh made it clear that he would not be visiting Pakistan but would merely go through the special corridor to visit Kartarpur Gurdwara Sahib.
The chief minister said Pakistan was making all-out efforts to revive terrorism in Punjab, asserting that his government was fully prepared to tackle the threat.
The security forces are on alert and geared to meet any eventuality, he said.
The Kartarpur Corridor will connect Darbar Sahib in Pakistan's Kartarpur with Dera Baba Nanak shrine in Gurdaspur district in Punjab and facilitate visa-free movement of Indian pilgrims, who will have to just obtain a permit to visit the Kartarpur Sahib located in Pakistan's Narowal district across the Ravi river.
The corridor will be thrown open to pilgrims in November to mark the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak.
In a major initiative last November, both India, and Pakistan had agreed to set up the Kartarpur Corridor.