Khaleej Times

Christian teen forced to convert, marry rescued

- Thomson Reuters Foundation

karachi — The Sindh Police have rescued a missing Christian teenager who was allegedly forced to convert to Islam and marry a 44-year-old Muslim man, her family said after the case sparked street protests and outrage on social media.

A court in Karachi ordered police to free the 13-year-old and arrest the man three weeks after she disappeare­d following appeals by women’s rights and Christian organisati­ons for authoritie­s to act.

Police took the girl to a women’s shelter in Karachi where she will stay until a court hearing on Thursday, said Jibran Nasir, her parent’s lawyer. The man, a neighbour of the family, was due to appear in court on Wednesday.

Nasir said he hoped the girl’s school and government records would be enough evidence to prove her age and “for the court to determine that she was a minor”.

The Sindh High Court initially accepted statements from the girl that she was 18 — the legal marriage age in the province, and had willingly converted to Islam and wed, sparking protests in Karachi by Christian groups and rights campaigner­s.

“My husband went to the police and reported her missing... but they did nothing,” the girl’s mother Rita Raja said at Karachi’s Holy Trinity Cathedral, where the family has been seeking refuge since her October 13 disappeara­nce.

“Two days later the police put a marriage certificat­e in my husband’s hand stating she had married,” Raja told the Thomson Reuters Foundation at the cathedral, the seat of the Church of Pakistan.

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