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Police turn blind eye to rampant kidnapping and rape of Hindu girls in Pak's Sindh province | A 12-year-old Hindu girl, Nandini, is still missing as police officials have failed to recover her even
after four months of her being allegedly picked up by an influential individual of the city. Officials have no information regarding Nandini's whereabouts, who
was kidnapped in December last year, and the accused named Younis has not been
arrested despite the fact that there is a first information report (FIR) registered
against him. It is not an isolated case where Hindu families have been left with
little choice than to lament over their fate, with no help in sight from the authorities.
Several Hindu families, which are at the receiving end of the government's apathy,
are awaiting justice for years but there's no one to listen to their plight. According
to Roshni Research and Development Welfare Organisation (RRDWO), a non-government
organisation (NGO), a research has shown in majority of cases involving the minority
community, police only provide lip service and do not seriously hunt down the
criminals. The NGO's President, Muhammad Ali, cited another case of a 17-year-old
Hindu girl, who was kidnapped and raped by four men, in January this year. All
the four accused were granted pre-arrest bail by a session court. "Rape is a non-bail
able offence in Pakistan and this is against criminal procedure and the law,"
The Daily Times quoted Ali, as saying. Ali said the Asian Human Rights Commission
has also expressed its serious concern over the case. "Instead of giving justice
to the victim's family, the police later arrested the victim's father on a false
offence, and have obstructed attempts by the family to file an FIR and obtain
a medical report," he added. Ali also disclosed that an 'illegal' tribal court
had asked the victim girl to marry her rapist and convert to Islam following which
the girl had threatened public self-immolation. "Not arresting the rapists and
rather forcing a Hindu girl, who is a rape victim, to convert to Islam and be
the wife of the culprit could be double trauma for the victim. It is another form
of further victimising a woman," he said. Ali also appealed to the Chief Justice
of Pakistan, Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry to take suo moto notice of the
gross human rights violations of the poor and the marginalized minorities in the
Sindh province at the hands of police and lower judiciary, who are influenced
by the feudal and local elite. |
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