If something of a follow-up question might be permitted, who was demanding the population transfers in the first place?
To keep the second question aside, there was no demand for transfer of population, but after it had all settled down, there was indeed a demand for restoring the women who were lost. And the first, these communities were one and the same, they belonged to the same ethnicity but were people of different religions, it was the various episodes of violence, communally thag really brought out the hatred, extreme entities of both sides would cause violence and it led to scenes of trains full of corpses with severed heads, and a blame, a blame that the other people were responsible for such cruel things and wanted to return the cruelty. The times of that period were breeding grounds of communal forces, there were communal incidents before too, but never on a scale even remotely close to this, and were mostly localised scuffles, they would never spread to areas outside but during the partition times and months before it the sheer scale of violence led to the spread of it and eventually the hatred and then more violence