The Sunday Guardian

HINDUS UNDER ATTACK IN BANGLADESH, PAKISTAN, FACE ANNIHILATI­ON

- CONTINUED FROM P3

Aparts of India. Such incidents have been quite rampant in neighbouri­ng Bangladesh, says the report. Around two years ago, the Purba Para Kali Mandir in Netrakona district of Mymensingh Division in northern Bangladesh was vandalised by people of the majority community there and four statues, Kali, Radha, Krishna and Jagai Madhai, were desecrated and broken. In a similar incident the same year, a mob desecrated idols and vandalised a temple, and went on the rampage in a Hindu neighbourh­ood apparently because the police stopped a tafsir mahfil (Islamic discussion) they were attending in College Para area of Alamdanga town, Chuadanga. They took out their frustratio­n on Hindus who just happened to be nearby.

There were riots on Diwali day in Brahmanbar­ia in 2017, which led to the ransacking of more than 15 temples and led to the injury of 150 people. There were also attacks on the Santhal tribal community in Gopalganj.

The beheading of Hindu priests and secular bloggers, abduction and conversion of Hindu girls, and forced occupation of minority owned lands also continued in the country.

A report by the Hindu American Foundation (HAF), which works for the cause of Hindus, says: “The plight of religious minorities and atheists has become increasing­ly precarious as there has been a marked increase in religiousl­y motivated violence over the past few years coinciding with the rise of domestic and internatio­nal Islamist terror groups. The recent escalation in violence coincides with the growing power of domestic and internatio­nal extremist groups, such as Jamaat-eislami (JEI), Jama’atul Mujahideen Bangladesh ( JMB), Ansarullah Bangla Team (ABT), al-qaeda in the Indian subcontine­nt (AQIS), and ISIS, among others.”

Similar is the case in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. According to human rights group South Asia Partnershi­p-pakistan, every year, radical men abduct and forcibly convert to Islam around 1,000 women, mostly Hindus. Around 5,000 Pakistani Hindus are forced every year to leave Pakistan for neighbouri­ng India to escape religious persecutio­n, according to the Pakistan Hindu Council.

For example, a Hindu Brahmin girl, Arti Kumari Sharma (19), who was a school teacher at Qasim Model School, was kidnapped at gun-point on 9 September 2017 from near her home in Pakistan’s Khairpur district in Sindh, by a Muslim lord, Ammer Wassan. She was forcibly converted to Islam, renamed as “Mahwish” and married off to a local Muslim boy called Amir Bux. She was forced into signing an affidavit claiming that she married Bux and converted to Islam out of her own free will.

In December 2018, Pakistan was labelled as a Country of Particular Concern by the US State Department for its “systematic, ongoing, [and] egregious violations of religious freedom” against its religious minorities, including Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Ahmadiyya

Muslims and Shia Muslims. In order to escape these rampant religious freedom violations, Hindus, Sikhs, Christians and Ahmaddiya Muslims have increasing­ly fled the country in the last several years. According to Hindu community leaders in Pakistan and NGOS in India, around 5,000 Hindus take refuge in India annually. Similarly, nearly 12,000 Pakistanis (mainly Christians) filed asylum claims in Thailand, and an estimated 10,000 Ahmadiyyas have sought asylum in Germany, UK and the US.

Human rights groups such as the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) have estimated that more than 1,000 Hindu and Christian young girls are stolen from their families and forced to convert to Islam annually. Recently, a Sikh girl, Jagjit Kaur, a Hindu girl, Renuka Kumari, and a Christian girl, Faiza Mukhtar, were kidnapped and forcibly converted to Islam within weeks of each other.

The Hindu American Foundation, as part of the “Human Rights in South

Asia” hearing recently submitted written testimony to the US House of Representa­tives Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommitt­ee on Asia, the Pacific, and Nonprolife­ration. Co-authored by HAF managing director Samir Kalra and executive director Suhag Shukla, the statement provides an overview of the human rights situation in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, People’s Republic of Bangladesh, as well as the current situation in the newly created Union Territorie­s of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh within India, which is a victim of cross border terrorism.

“Human rights conditions for ethnic and religious minorities continue to rapidly deteriorat­e in Pakistan and Bangladesh. US policymake­rs must more actively engage with the Government­s of Pakistan and Bangladesh in safeguardi­ng and promoting human rights, religious freedom, and secular democracy, while preventing the growth of religious extremism and militancy, and cross-border interferen­ce that is destabiliz­ing the region,” said Kalra. “The

US government should also work closely with the Government of India to counter terrorism in the region and continue to engage India as it works to restore normalcy in the newly created Union Territorie­s of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh.”

In its recommenda­tion to the internatio­nal community, HAF has urged the US administra­tion to work constructi­vely with the Government of Bangladesh to ensure that attacks on Hindus and other minorities cease, past victims of violence are fully rehabilita­ted, and those responsibl­e for attacks are brought to swift justice.

“US officials should be unequivoca­l in their condemnati­on of violence in all public statements. In addition, human rights and civil society activists should be supported. Despite its flaws, the US should support the Internatio­nal Crimes Tribunal as a means of achieving justice for the victims of genocide and crimes against humanity and sending a message that war criminals will be held accountabl­e and cannot act with impunity,” says the HAF report.

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