The Welland Tribune

Hindu woman elected to Pakistan’s senate in historic first

- ZARAR KHAN

ISLAMABAD— A woman from Pakistan’s marginaliz­ed Hindu minority has been elected to the senate for the first time ever in an election over the weekend in which a Taliban- linked cleric was defeated.

Krishna Kumari, a member of the Pakistan People’s Party, hails from the so- called untouchabl­es, the lowest rung of the caste system that still prevails in Pakistan and neighbouri­ng India.

Lawmakers in national and four provincial assemblies on Saturday elected half of the 104member senate to six- year terms.

Deposed premier Nawaz Sharif’s party holds a plurality of 33 seats in the upper house of parliament after winning 15 in Saturday’s elections.

Former president Asif Zardari’s party came in second, followed by the party led by former cricket star Imran Khan.

Khan’s party supported Maulana Samiul Haq, a mentor to a number of Taliban leaders, but he fell short.

Extremist groups in Pakistan have mobilized mass rallies in recent years to protest U. S. policies and support tough antiblasph­emy laws, but have largely failed to translate their clout into electoral victories.

Most of Pakistan’s Hindu population fled to India as part of the population exchange that followed the 1947 partition.

Those who remain live on the political and economic margins, and like other minorities they have endured discrimina­tion at the hands of the Muslim majority.

“I feel delighted, this was unthinkabl­e for me to reach the senate,” Kumari told the Associated Press.

Kumari, who was born and raised in a remote district, attributed her success to her parents, who encouraged her to pursue her education and helped her to earn a university degree.

She later worked for a non- government­al organizati­on before joining the Pakistan People’s Party of slain former prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

The party nominated her for a seat reserved for minority candidates from the Sindh province, where it holds a majority.

“I will continue to work for the rights of the oppressed people, especially for the empowermen­t of women, their health and education,” she said.

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