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Worsening Conditions Driving Out Pakistani Hindus from Sindh Says Malani

ISLAMABAD: A Hindu legislator has cautioned Pakistan's new government about a possible exodus of members of his minority community due to forced marriages, worsening law and order and rampant poverty, and called for quick and effective legislation to safeguard their rights, according to a media report on Monday. 

Dr Mahesh Malani, the only non-Muslim Politician who was elected to the Sindh Assembly from PS-61 (Tharparkar), warned the government against a possible exodus of his community members from the country.

Discrimination against Hindus, the country's largest minority group, was forcing his community members to migrate to 'safer places', claimed Malani.

"The increasing sense of insecurity, caused by issues like forced conversion of Hindu girls to Islam, is compelling the community members to migrate to other places (like India)," said Malani.

Dr Malani, who contested the May 11 elections on the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) ticket, said the increasing sense of insecurity among community was the cause of the high scale migrations. 

According to sources, the Hindu legislator, who has been pushing for a proposed law seeking registration of Hindu marriages since 2008, said the government should form committees at the district level to deal with such cases immediately. 

He said the new government should form committees in every district to deal with the problems of minorities. 

These committees should comprise Muslims, non-Muslims and members of the Council of Islamic Ideology and they should take up cases related to alleged forced conversions and forced marriages. 

Rampant poverty is the main reason behind such incidents, particularly in Sindh where Hindus make up a substantial chunk of the population, he said. Some Hindu businessmen are shifting their businesses due to the lawlessness in Pakistan's largest city of Karachi, Malani said. 

Since September last year, nearly 1,000 Hindu families have been struggling to migrate to India, the report claimed. 

Some of them succeeded in making their way to India, a "development likely to raise questions about Pakistan's ability to protect its religious minorities", it said. 

Several Hindu welfare organisations at Jodhpur in Rajasthan, which shares a border with Sindh, extended their support to Pakistani migrants, said Ramesh Jaipal of Hare Rama Foundation. 

Leaders of the Hindu community had taken up the issue with Pakistan's Supreme Court, which ordered the implementation of laws to address the concerns of minorities, Jaipal said. 

"The existing laws should be implemented to protect their rights, this was the court's order," said Malani, who earlier served as a parliamentarian in a seat reserved for minorities. 

Nine legislators currently represent minorities in the Sindh Assembly, eight in the Punjab Assembly and three each in the legislatures of Balochistan and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. 

 

 

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