KARACHI – Sindh province has passed a law against forced conversions, much to the relief of Hindus and Christians in this Pakistani province.
A Pakistan province on Thursday (Nov 24) passed a law making “forced conversions” punishable with a life sentence and forbidding minors from changing their religion, a bid to protect minorities in the conservative Muslim country.
The new Bill, passed by legislators in southern Sindh province, also mandates a 21-day waiting period for any person who wants to convert.
“It is necessary to criminalise forced conversions and provide protection for those who are victims of this abhorrent practice,” an excerpt of the Bill, seen by Agence France-Presse, reads.
Forced conversions, particularly of Hindus to Islam, are an issue in Sindh and throughout the Muslim nation of some 200 million, where minorities have long fought for their rights.
In 2014, an advocate group which campaigns against religious violence in Pakistan told US Congress that forced conversions generally involved the abduction of girls or young women, who were made to convert to Islam and married.
The Movement for Solidarity and Peace said girls were often raped or beaten and, when the family complained to police, the abductor claimed the girl had willingly converted.
Exact figures are unverifiable, but hundreds of people are believed to undergo such conversions each year.
The legislation bans anyone under the age of 18 from changing their religion. It calls for a minimum sentence of five years and maximum of life imprisonment for anyone found to be forcing people to convert.
“It is a historic law we have carved and passed,” Mr Nand Kumar Goklani, a Hindu legislator and author of the law, told the media.
“This will end the plight of minority Hindus, who will feel more protected now,” he said.
[With media inputs]