Washington, D.C. (March 16, 2012) - The Hindu
American Foundation (HAF) released its eighth annual Hindu human rights
report today amidst increased concern over the worsening plight of
Hindus in Pakistan. The report, Hindus in South Asia and the Diaspora: A Survey of Human Rights, 2011,
documents human rights violations against Hindus in Pakistan as well as
seven other countries and regions around the world, including
Bangladesh, Bhutan, Fiji, the Indian State of Jammu and Kashmir,
Malaysia, Sri Lanka, and Trinidad and Tobago. It also summarizes the
situation facing the small Hindu populations in Afghanistan and Saudi
Arabia.
According to the Foundation, Hindu minorities continue to be
subjected to violent attacks, restrictions on religious freedom,
discriminatory laws, and economic and social marginalization in many of
these nations. In Malaysia, for instance, HAF asserts that the
Bumiputra (Sons of the Soil) policies, enshrined in Article 153 of the
Constitution, provide economic and social benefits to the majority
ethnic Muslim Malay population, while explicitly discriminating against
Hindus and other minorities. Moreover, non-Muslims are increasingly
compelled to adjudicate family law cases through the Islamic Sharia law
court system. This past November, the Foundation sponsored a
Congressional briefing, Institutionalized Racism and Religious Discrimination in Malaysia, with exiled Malaysian Hindu civil rights leader, Waytha Moorthy, in order to raise awareness on these issues.
"While we are encouraged by improvements in the condition of Hindus
in countries such as Fiji and Trinidad and Tobago, the situation for
Hindus continues to significantly deteriorate in other areas,
particularly Pakistan and Malaysia,” said Ramesh Rao, PhD, HAF’s Human
Rights Coordinator and author of its 2011 report. “It is absolutely
imperative that the international community and the U.S. government
urgently address the systematic and rampant denial of fundamental human
rights in these countries.”
The recent kidnapping and forced conversion of a young Pakistani
Hindu girl, Rinkle Kumari, is indicative of the danger faced by the
Hindu community in Pakistan, allege several human rights groups. Kumari
was reportedly kidnapped from her home in Sindh province, forcibly
converted to Islam, and married to a Muslim man with the assistance of a
leading Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) politician’s son. The case has
attracted widespread media attention and has shed light on the common
practice of kidnappings and forced conversions in this South Asian
nation.
According to numerous sources, including the U.S. Commission on
International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) and the Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan (HRCP), at least 20 - 25 Hindu girls are kidnapped and
converted to Islam every month in the southern Sindh province alone.
HRCP further contends that local politicians, police authorities, and
the courts are frequently complicit in such kidnappings and conversions,
or fail to adequately protect the victims.
Kumari's case has also garnered the interest of U.S. Congressman Brad Sherman (D-CA), who wrote directly to Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari earlier this week,
urging him to intervene on Kumari’s behalf and ensure her safe return
to her family. Rep. Sherman’s letter further called on President
Zardari to put an end to the kidnappings and other acts of “harassment”
of the Hindu community in Pakistan.
"Rinkle Kumari’s case is a heartbreaking example of the desperate
plight faced by Hindu girls and their families in Pakistan,” said Samir
Kalra, Esq., HAF’s Director and Senior Fellow for Human Rights.
“Unfortunately, such kidnappings are only one of a litany of abuses
Hindus confront in that country.” The Foundation’s latest report notes
that Hindus and other minorities are subjected to a wide range of
violence and persecution in Pakistan, including abductions for ransom,
attacks on places of worship, and institutional and legal
discrimination. Poor rural Hindus are also victimized by the bonded
labor system, where they are unable to pay off debts to feudal
landlords.
The majority of Pakistan’s remaining Hindu population reside in
Sindh, with smaller concentrations in the provinces of Balochistan,
Punjab, and Khyber Pakhtunkwa. Many Sindhi advocacy groups, such as
World Sindhi Congress (WSC) and the Sindhi American Political Action
Committee (SAPAC) have been active in raising awareness about the plight
of Hindus in Sindh.
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