Sikh girl’s conversion triggers dissent in Pakistan

Agencies

Islamabad: The alleged conversion of a Sikh girl in Pakistan has touched a raw nerve with the minorities and sparked an outcry.

Nankana Sahib police have registered a First Information Report against six people

Her family alleges that a Muslim family had kidnapped her on gunpoint.

Enraged over the incident, Pakistan’s Sikh community has set up a 30-member team to take up the issue with the government. Punjab province too has formed a high-powered committee headed by provincial Law Minister Raja Basharat to engage with the Sikhs’ committee.

That this event unfolded only days before Pakistan is to hold a three-day international Sikh conference starting Saturday adds to the sensitivity of the matter. District Police Officer (DPO) of Nankana Sahib, Faisal Shahzad, informed the Inspector General of Punjab on Friday that they need to act swiftly to pacify the Sikh community lest they disrupt the conference in Lahore.

Shahzad told 101Reporters that the discontent of the minorities is gathering steam. He said he informed the IG that anti-government sentiments were boiling up among the Sikh youth even as the community on a whole was agitating.

Emotions are running high in Nankana Sahib in particular. The Sikhs held sporadic protests across Pakistan to condemn the incident.

Nankana Sahib police have registered a First Information Report against six people based on the complaint filed by the girl’s brother. DPO Shahzad informed that the police have arrested an accused and are conducting raids to nab the other suspects named in the complaint. Further, he informed that the girl has been sent to government custody in Lahore.

The girl’s family and the Sikh community in Pakistan have been urging the government that she be brought back to her house regardless of whether her conversion was forced or voluntary.

On Thursday, civil society in Pakistan joined the protest. “Forced conversion of girls hailing from minorities, be it Hindus, Christians or Sikhs, isn’t acceptable at any cost. The government of Pakistan as well as millions of Pakistanis must discourage this,” said Kishwar Naheed, a prominent Pakistani poetess and a renowned scholar, over the phone. She has been conferred with Sitara-e-Imtiaz (Star of Excellence), Pakistan’s third highest civilian honour.

On July 5, thousands of Hindus, including women and children, hit the streets in Pakistan’s biggest cities to condemn the kidnapping and forced conversion of young Hindu girls. Large protests were held over the same issue in Kohistan belt comprising parts of Jamshoro and Thatta districts just last Thursday.

Protesters claim that more than 50 girls from minority communities in Pakistan have been kidnapped over the last four months alone. Many believe this is an underhand tactic to drive the Hindus out of Pakistan.

“We need protection. The government must safeguard the rights of Hindus and other minorities. Prime Minister Imran Khan needs to take steps in ensuring our rights before it gets too late,” Hindu activist Bheeko Lal told this correspondent.

In Pakistan, an Islamic republic of about 200 million Muslims, the Hindus make up 1.6 per cent of the population, estimated to be numbering about 3.6 million as per 2018 census.

“We are very worried. We cannot afford sending our young children to India or other countries to avoid forced conversion,” said 46-year-old Sanao Menghwar from Nawab Shah in the Sindh province, where the majority of Pakistan’s Hindus live.