An elderly man who left Muzaffarnagar nearly three decades ago reappeared this week to complete paperwork for the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR), reuniting family members who had long assumed he was dead.
Muzaffarnagar missing man returns
The man, identified as Sharif, is reported to have moved to Asansol in West Bengal in 1997 after his wife died. According to relatives, he remarried there and gradually lost contact with his family in Muzaffarnagar. Neighbours and kin said they had made attempts to trace him as recently as 2011 but were unable to locate him and assumed he had passed away.
News agency ANI quoted Sharif’s nephew, Aklim, who said that at the time of his departure the family had only landline numbers to share. “I gave him three contact numbers. After that, he disappeared,” Aklim told ANI. He added that searches in Asansol drew no leads and that the family had long given up hope.
The reunion came as a surprise when, according to relatives, a younger family member informed them that Sharif had returned. “At first I could not believe it, but seeing him confirmed he was alive,” Aklim said. Word spread quickly and neighbours and extended family gathered to meet the man who had been missing from their lives for nearly 28 years.
Local officials said Sharif had come specifically to complete official documentation associated with the Special Intensive Revision. The BLO requested original documents, which the family agreed to send, officials added. The simple administrative requirement for identity verification thus became the catalyst for an emotional homecoming.
Residents described the scene as one of surprise and relief. People who had assumed a relative’s death found themselves in the unusual position of welcoming him home. While details of Sharif’s life in Asansol, including the reasons for his loss of contact, remain limited, relatives said he had remarried after the death of his first wife in 1997.
The SIR effort, carried out to update records and verify identities, has had other local effects beyond administrative accuracy. In this case the drive to gather correct documentation inadvertently revived a presumed-dead connection, raising questions about how many other families may have lost touch with members over the years due to migration and limited communication technologies.
For the family in Muzaffarnagar, the visit offered a chance to fill administrative gaps and to close a painful chapter that had remained open for decades. Aklim said the family would now assist with the necessary paperwork so that the BLO can complete the verification. Neighbours said they would support the family with any follow-up required.
The episode underlines the small but significant ways government processes can affect ordinary lives. What began as a procedural requirement for document verification has ended in a reunion that brought relief to relatives who had long mourned a relation they believed lost.
Officials overseeing the SIR process have been urged in other districts to be sensitive to similar cases, where verification drives may uncover long-separated family members. For the moment, Sharif’s return is a rare and human reminder of the personal stories behind routine administration.
Key Takeaways:
- An elderly man, Sharif, who moved to Asansol in 1997, returned to Muzaffarnagar to complete documents for the Special Intensive Revision (SIR).
- Family members had lost contact after 1997 and assumed he had died following unsuccessful searches in 2011.
- Neighbours and relatives gathered when the man reappeared to submit original documents requested by the BLO.
- The SIR process unexpectedly reunited a family after nearly three decades.

















