Source: News Bharati |
New Delhi, May 3:
Alleging human rights violation against women belonging to the Hindu
minority community in Pakistan, senior BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi on
Wednesday demanded a statement from the government on the flight of
over 400 affected families to India.
As other Opposition members created a
hue and cry, Home Minister P Chidambaram responded calmly saying that
the Govt promises a statement. “After consulting the Prime Minister and
the External Affairs Minister, the Government will make a Statement,”
Chidambaram told the Lok Sabha.
Murli Manohar Joshi expressed concern over the decreasing percentage of Hindu population in the neighbouring country.
In his speech, Joshi alleged that young
women were being kidnapped, raped and converted in the Sindh province of
Pakistan and added that an average of 25 girls were falling prey to
such crimes every month.
"When the local courts grant some relief
to the victims, they are threatened," he said, adding that there has
been an exodus of a large number of people from the province and over
400 affected Hindu families have fled to India.
"This is a gross violation of human
rights as also of their cultural rights. There are many instances of
religious persecution. Large scale atrocities are being carried out
against minorities in Pakistan," Joshi said quoting reports.
Observing that the government termed
these incidents as "internal matters of Pakistan", the BJP leader said,
"It is a matter of regret that our government has remained silent on the
issue so far."
While
"we want good relations with Pakistan", Joshi said the Prime Minister
should assure the House that the government would take up the matter at
international human rights fora. Several BJP members stood in support of
Joshi and demanded an immediate statement from the government.
In Pakistan, the issue of hindu girls
being kidnapping, forcefully converted to Islam and married to muslims
was thrust into the spotlight by the case of Rinkle Kumari, a
17-year-old Hindu girl from the town of Mirpur Mathelo in the southern
province of Sindh. The case was one of three that recently went before
Pakistan's Supreme Court.
In her statement before Supreme Court of
Pakistan, Rinkle cried for justice. In her statement, Rinkle said, “In
Pakistan there is justice only for Muslims, justice is denied Hindus.
Kill me here, now, in court. But do not send me back to the Darul-Aman
[Koranic school] ... kill me". But the Muslim elements who kidnapped her
had continued saying that Rinkle converted to Islam and married the
muslim boy willingly.
Kumari's parents, who are not related to
Rachna's family, allege that five men broke into their house in late
February, subdued Rinkle with a chloroform-soaked cloth and took her
away. The parents say the girl was forced to convert to Islam and marry
Naveed Shah, a neighbor. Shah contends Rinkle acted willingly .
Recently, Rachna Kumari, 16, was
shopping for dresses in this city's dust-choked bazaar when it happened.
The man who her family says abducted her was not a street thug but was a
police officer. Rachana’s family says that she was kidnapped for
converting to Islam and to marry with her Muslim kidnapper.
In a country where Hindu-dominated India
is widely hated as Enemy No. 1, Pakistan's Hindu community endures
extortion, disenfranchisement and other forms of discrimination. These
days, however, Hindus are obsessed on a surge of kidnappings of teenage
girls by young Muslim men who force them to convert and wed. Pakistani
human rights activists report as many as 25 cases a month.
Hindus in Pakistan say the
forcible conversions follow the same script. The victim, abducted by a
young man related to or working for a feudal boss, is taken to a mosque
where clerics, along with the prospective groom's family, threaten to
harm her and her relatives if she resists.
Almost always, the girl
complies, and not long afterward, she is brought to a local court, where
a judge, usually a Muslim, rubber-stamps the conversion and marriage,
according to Hindu community members who have attended such hearings.
Often the young Muslim man is
accompanied by backers armed with rifles. Few members of the girl's
family are allowed to appear, and the victim, seeing no way out, signs
papers affirming her conversion and marriage.
"In court, usually it's just
four or five members of the girl's family against hundreds of armed
people for the boy," says B.H. Khurana, a doctor in Jacobabad and a
Hindu community leader. "In such a situation when we are unarmed and
outnumbered, how can we fight our case in court?"
Prominent Pakistani Muslims have joined Hindu leaders in calling attention to the problem. President
Asif Ali Zardari's sister, lawmaker Azra Fazal Pechuho, told parliament
last month that a growing number of Hindu girls are being abducted and
held at madrasas, or Islamic religious schools, where they are forcibly
converted. She and other lawmakers have called for legislation to
prohibit the practice.
Asha Kumari, a 16-year-old Hindu girl
disappeared March 3 from a beauty parlor in Jacobabad where she was
taking a beautician's course, according to her brother, Vinod Kumar, 22.
Neither her family nor police could find her until April 13, when she
appeared before the Supreme Court, accompanied by her new husband,
Bashir Lashari. Like Rinkle, she told the court she had willingly
married and embraced Islam.
After one month of her abduction, Rachna
appeared in a black burka, surrounded by about 100 of Talani's
supporters, many of them armed, said the girl's uncle, Rakesh Kumar. The
judge accepted a statement written by Rachna that indicated she had
willingly converted and married. Her family contends the document was
drafted by Talani's lawyer.
A few weeks later, while out shopping
with her new husband's female relatives, Rachna appeared at her
grandmother's door and asked for a drink of water. "I asked her, 'Why
did you leave us?'" the grandmother, Maharajni Andhrabai, recalled. "She
said, 'I was forced to.' She was weeping."
Later, Talani reported that Rachna had
disappeared. Talani and her family both say they do not know where she
is. Talani is back at work, according to Jacobabad's police chief, Jam
Zafrullah Dharejo, who said the allegations against the officer were
unfounded.
Now the Kumari family has a singular
focus: safeguarding Rachna's 13-year-old sister, Bharti. They've
withdrawn her from school and forbidden her to set foot in the bazaar.
While most Hindu organizations
from India and Pakistan are expressing concern over this huge Human
Rights disaster happening around Pakistan Hindus, the Sonia led UPA
government is calm, unconcerned non unresponsive.
Interestingly the psudo-secular
self proclaimed rights activists army of Rajdeeps, the Burkhas, the
Teestas, the Maheshs and many more woofing sounds are silent on human
rights of Hindus in Pakistan and Islamic nations.
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