Islamabad: Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Monday termed the practice of forced conversions as “un-Islamic” and said there was no precedent in Islamic history for forcefully converting others.
Addressing an event in connection with the National Minorities Day at the Aiwan-e-Sadr (President’s House) here, Khan vowed to protect and develop worship places of minorities in Pakistan and also facilitate them to the maximum level to perform them religious rituals.
Khan said the Prophet himself had given minorities religious freedom and protected their places of worship.
“How can we then take it into our own hands to forcefully convert someone to Islam – either by marrying (non-Muslim) women (…) or on gunpoint or to (by threatening to) kill someone because of their religion?” he asked.
“All these things are un-Islamic. If God hadn’t given his messengers the power to impose their beliefs on someone, who are we (to do so)?” he asked, explaining that the messenger’s duty was only to spread the word of God.
Khan reiterated his commitment to build Pakistan on the model of ‘state of Madina’, ensuring rights to people, rule of law and provision of facilities to citizens at equal level.
In December last year, on the occassion of Mohammad Ali Jinnah’s birth anniversary, Khan issued a similar statement, speaking of a “Naya Pakistan”. He, however, compared the situation of the treatment of minorities in India, saying that Pakistan will ensure equal treatment of minority citizens, “unlike what is happening in India”.
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The prime minister said that his government is committed to open the Kartarpur corridor for Sikh community on 550th birth anniversary of Baba Guru Nanak.
Khan’s powerful message comes amidst growing cases of conversion of Hindu girls in the Sindh province.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, in its annual report in April, raised concerns about incidents of forced conversions and marriages of Hindu and Christian girls, saying around 1,000 such cases were reported in the southern Sindh province alone last year.
In March, two Hindu teenage sisters – Raveena (13) and Reena (15) – were allegedly kidnapped by a group of “influential” men from their home in Ghotki district in Sindh on the eve of Holi. Soon after the kidnapping, a video went viral in which a cleric was purportedly shown soleminising the marriage of the two girls, triggering a nationwide outrage.
Early this month, Pakistan’s Sindh assembly unanimously passed a resolution demanding that the practice of forced conversions and abductions of Hindu girls must be stopped and action be taken against those involved in such activities.
The resolution – moved by Grand Democratic Alliance (GDA) lawmaker Nand Kumar Goklani – was supported by the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party, as well as Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and the hardline Jamaat-e-Islami.
Khan said that Pakistan’s founder Mohammad Ali Jinnah in a famous speech of September 11, 1947 promised that religious minorities would be allowed to live in Pakistan according to their beliefs.
Addressing the gathering, President Arif Alvi too said that Pakistan will be developed on the pattern of ‘state of Madina’ to ensure equal rights to all its citizens irrespective of their caste, creed, sect and religion.
Hindus form the biggest minority community in Pakistan.
According to official estimates, 75 lakh Hindus live in Pakistan. However, according to the community, over 90 lakh Hindus are living in the country.
A majority of Pakistan’s Hindu population is settled in the Sindh province, where they share culture, traditions and language with their Muslim fellows.
(With inputs from Sajjad Hussain/PTI)