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Hindu Human Rights - Printable Version +- Forums (https://india-forum.com) +-- Forum: Indian History & Culture (https://india-forum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Indian Culture (https://india-forum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=11) +--- Thread: Hindu Human Rights (/showthread.php?tid=857) |
Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 10-10-2005 HUMAN RIGHTS FEATURES (Voice of the Asia-Pacific Human Rights Network) (A joint initiative of SAHRDC and HRDC) B-6/6 Safdarjung Enclave Extension, New Delhi 110 029, India Tel: +91-11-619 2717, 619 2706, 619 1120; Fax: 619 1120 E-mail: hrdc_online@hotmail.com BANGLADESH------------------------------------------ Vested interest: <b>Dhaka legalises dispossession Hindu minorities in Bangladesh</b> face institutionalised discrimination; the violence is only a symptom The violence against Hindus and other minorities in Bangladesh is a symptom of institutional discrimination against the minorities. The root of the problem is the Vested Property Act, a reincarnation of the Enemy Properties Act passed by the former Government of East Pakistan. Hundreds of thousands of people belonging to the minority Hindu community, as well as indigenous peoples, have been dispossessed of their properties under the Vested Properties Act. At the 56th Session of the Commission on Human Rights, SAHRDC submitted a written statement titled âviolation of economic, social and cultural rights of the legally identified enemies of Bangladesh.â The statement examined the state of the Hindu minorities and the institutional discrimination faced by them. The Government of Bangladesh submitted its reply at the 57th Session of the CHR after examining the SAHRDC document. The reply reflects the Government's attitude towards its minorities. The reply stated: âThe very title of the SAHRDC statement, âviolation of economic, social and cultural rights of the legally identified enemies of Bangladeshâ is misleading. There is [sic] no legally identified enemies of Bangladesh, legally or otherwise. The assertion of SAHRDC is baseless and tendentious. The existence of âenemiesâ however is implicit in the very title of theâEnemy Properties Act passed by the then Government of Pakistan and the Enemy Property (continuance of Emergency Provisions) (Repeal) Act, 1974 of the Government of Bangladesh. The Government of Bangladesh also stated that â[f]ollowing [the] emergence of Bangladesh as an independent and sovereign country in 1971⦠All the âenemy propertiesâ which were vested in the former Government of East Pakistan were declared as vested in the Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh (vesting property and assets) order, 1972 (P.O.No. 29/72) and the Enemy Property (continuance of Emergency Provisions) (Repeal) Act, 1974.â However, the Interim Report of United Nations Special Rapporteur on Religious Intolerance Abdelfattah Amor to the Millennium Session of the General Assembly indicated otherwise. The report that followed Amor's visit to Bangladesh in May 2000 said: âAfter Bangladesh won independence from Pakistan, the President of Bangladesh, in his Order No. 29 of 1972, changed the nomenclature to Vested Property Act, without altering the content of the law.â <b>The definition of âenemyâ as provided under the Defence of Pakistan Rules is therefore still applicable in Bangladesh. Under Section 3(b)(i) of the âEnemy Property (Continuance of Emergency Provisions (Repeal) Act 1974, âenemy propertyâ and âenemy firmsâ shall have the same meaning as are respectively assigned to them in the Defence of Pakistan Rules continued in force by the said Ordinance.â Clearly, therefore, Hindus are âlegally identified enemiesâ in Bangladesh.</b> In its reply, the Government of Bangladesh also stated: âNo property of any bonafide Bangladeshi Hindu National has been enlisted as vested property since independence of Bangladesh till date.â The assertion of the Government of Bangladesh is untrue. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Religious Intolerance stated in his report: <b>â[T]o this day, interest groups and individuals continue to appropriate property belonging to the Hindu community, and indeed to do so with the complicity of the authorities and of influential people. In a significant number of cases, Hindus are dispossessed of their property, even when they are the legal owners of such assets.â</b> The Law Ministry of the Government of Bangladesh in a direction issued after the communal riots that followed the demolition of the Babri mosque by Hindu fundamentalists in India in 1992 urged the Government to âdetermine whether there are other enemy properties.â The order further stated âIf the Committees find out [sic] any concealed properties it will investigate into the matter and bring it to the notice of the Government⦠On 9 April 2001, the Parliament of Bangladesh passed the Vested Properties Return Act, 2001. It was passed after being referred to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Ministry of Land for cursory scrutiny. The law was an exercise in political tokenism before the general elections. It also does not adequately address the issue. This is reflected in the UN Special Rapporteurâs report. (see box below) The Vested Properties Return Act, 2001, is intended to return the vested properties to their original owners. However, in all probability, it will merely serve to legalise the omissions and commissions committed under a patently discriminatory law. With Dhakaâs consistent refusal to acknowledge the fact of discrimination against its minorities, and in view of its record on ameliorating their condition, it is also highly improbable that a regulation - and a flawed one at that - such as the Vested Properties Return Act will be implemented in the near future. Special Rapporteurâs report, 9 August 2000 "It appears, however, that this bill would present serious problems. According to the non-governmental sources, the bill provides that properties legally vested under the ownership of the Government and those declared to be enemy or vested property after 16 February 1969 will not be considered as vested property after the said period. Most Hindu property, however, was declared vested property after that date. The bill also states that the proprietorship status of the vested property will not be challenged if the property was transferred to the Government, a government institution, or to a private individual, has been sold or has been handed over permanently by the Government at the directives of a court. It will not even be possible to challenge such cases in court... Lastly, the bill provides that in the event of the decease of the original owner, rights of inheritance shall apply in accordance with Hindu religious personal laws. Hindu women would therefore be automatically excluded from inheritance, since Hindu religious personal laws do not accord any rights of inheritance to women.â Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 10-21-2005 <b>Mumbai lawyer serves notice to famous cabaret</b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Friday, 21 October , 2005, 11:55 Mumbai: Objecting to showing Lord Shiva and Lord Ganesha in their revue Bonheur, a lawyer from Mumbai has served notice to the worldâs most celebrated cabaret, Lido, asking them to remove the scene that hurts the religious feelings of Hindus. Lawyer Sudhir Shah said that he had watched the revue of Lido on September 27 at Champs Elysees in Paris and his religious sentiments were deeply hurt. "I have served a notice to the Lido asking them to remove the scene from the revue," he said. He said that the theme of Bonheur is a womanâs quest for happiness and to show this the revue takes the audience on a 90-minute emotion packed journey to a land of spectacular fantasy and discovery. "But in doing so, the revue makes use of Indian gods Lord Shiva and Lord Ganesha and thereby humiliates them and makes a mockery of them," Shah added. The lawyer said that no Hindu could tolerate a scene where topless cabaret girls are shown dancing in front of Lord Shivaâs idol and Lord Ganesha is shown dancing with topless women. "Why have the creators of the revue enacted a scene wherein deliberate mockery of Hindu Gods have been made?â he asked. âWhy have the producers, directors and the owners not cared for the religious sentiments of Hindus?" In the notice, Shah said Lord Shiva is considered the destroyer of all evils. Hindus worship Lord Ganesh when they start any new venture. To show Lord Shiva in a satirical cabaret and to make Lord Ganesha dance amongst topless women is an insult to Hindu gods. Shah said that he would approach the French High Commission in India and the Indian Embassy in France, if the organisers fail to reply to his notice of the confirmation of omitting the objectionable scene <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 10-25-2005 <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Saraswathi idol desecrated </b> Staff Reporter mailcenter.comcast.net/wm...194&sid=c0 <i>Crime Branch probe begins; dawn-to-dusk hartal in Kollam today</i> KOLLAM: A Saraswathi idol at the entrance to Panmana Ashram was found desecrated on Sunday morning, leading to tension in the area. An all-party meeting at the ashram called a dawn-to-dusk hartal in Kollam district on Monday in protest against the desecration. The Crime Branch of the Police Department is investigating the case. R. Krishnabhadran, Superintendent of Police, Crime Branch, Kollam, inspected the site. A strong police force has been deployed in the area. Chief Minister Oommen Chandy called up ashram head Pranavananda Theerthapada. The ashram authorities requested Mr. Chandy to hold the Crime Branch inquiry. Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee president Ramesh Chennithala also called up the ashram. The upper hands of the idol were damaged. The right one was severed and the left broken and dangling. Hundreds of devotees rushed to the ashram on hearing about the incident. <b>What has alarmed the ashram authorities is that it comes close on the heels of an attack on Chattambi Swamy Samadhi Memorial Library at Panmana last Thursday. The ashram is Chattambi Swamy's samadhi</b>. <b>The police suspect the hand of anti-social elements in the attack</b>. Kaivalyananda Swamy of the ashram said both the attacks appeared to be planned. But there was no reason to conclude that there could be a communal element behind the attacks. "It could be the work of anti-social elements,'' he added. Unfortunate, says Antony The former Chief Minister A.K. Antony, who was at Karunagapally, visited the ashram. Mr. Antony, who held talks with Swamy Pranavananda Theerthapada, told presspersons that the attack was pre-planned and unfortunate. He wanted the culprits to be nabbed as soon as possible, and called for stringent action against them. N.K. Premachandran, MP; A.N. Rajan Babu, Karunagapally MLA; and the Congress leaders K.C. Rajan and Sooranad Rajashekaram called at the ashram. After visiting the ashram, Kollam MP P. Rajendran and other Communist Party of India (Marxist) leaders, including its central committee member M.A. Baby, called for an investigation by a high-level special team. Mr. Rajendran told presspersons that attacks on religious institutions was on the rise, and there could be a conspiracy behind them. He alleged that the all-round failure of the <b>United Democratic Front Government was giving criminal elements the confidence to unleash such attacks</b>, he added. FROM The Hindu Dated October 24, 2005<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 11-02-2005 <b>Brit Hindus revive Bapu's non-violent resistance</b><!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->LONDON: British Hindus are to take the politics of Gandhian non-violent resistance to a new level by sending thousands of unstamped letters to the country's postal department to "clog up the system". It is part of an ingenious protest against Royal Mail's refusal to withdraw one of this year's controversial new mother and child Christmas stamps depicting a Hindu couple worshipping the Baby Jesus. The stamp, which carries a nearly 400-year-old painting currently hanging in a Mumbai museum, goes on sale across the UK (on Wednesday) and is priced so that it would mainly be used on post destined for non-European Union destinations such as India. .............<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 11-02-2005 came via email: <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Dear all On behalf of national and regional Hindu organisations in the UK, we ask you to kindly protest to Royal Mail about their refusal to withdraw a stamp that is seen as insensitive and inappropriate to Hindu sentiments. The stamp shows two Hindus worshiping Baby Christ in a manner that many Hindus feel is inappropriate because of the issues surrounding conversions and evangelisation in India. Royal Mail have categorically said they cannot withdraw it because they have already sent it to 17000 Post Offices. Royal Mail have IT software that can enable them to send a message to every clerk in every Post Office counter to ask them to stop selling the stamps, but yet they have chosen not to do so. <b>Therefore we URGE YOU TO PASS THIS LETTER TO EVERYONE ON YOUR EMAIL LIST AND PROTEST IN THE FOLLOWING WAY</b>: 1. Write a letter of protest and send it to Royal Mail Headquarters 148 Old Street LONDON EC1V 9HQ T without affixing a postage stamp. The Hindu Forum hopes that hundreds of letters will be sent in this way clogging the local post office where the letters will be accumulated for collection, thus causing a logistical nightmare worse than withdrawing the stamp. 2. Send a letter of protest by email to press.office@royalmail.com 3. Send a letter of protest by email to Barry Gardiner MP, Minister for Efficiency at the Department of Trade and Industry who is responsible for Royal Mail to gardinerb@parliament.uk Barry Gardiner is a good friend of the Hindu community and will certainly take note of Hindu sentiments! 3. Stop buying the offensive stamp when sold by a Post Office counter and insist on another stamp of similar denomination 4. Write to your local MP explaining why they should ask the Post Office to withdraw the stamp 5. Ask all your friends and relatives to send letters of protest without affixing postage stamps. Each individual can even send ten or more letters to increase the volume of mail reaching the post office without stamps. 6. Take part in the mass protest march that will be announced at a suitable time if Royal Mail continue their refusal to withdraw the stamp. <b>PLEASE FORWARD THIS LETTER TO AS MANY PEOPLE AS POSSIBLE AND TAKE PART IN THE PROTEST BY WRITING LETTERS WITHOUT STAMPS AND BY SENDING EMAILS. REGARDS FROM THE TEAM AT THE HINDU FORUM OF BRITAIN</b> ___________________________________________________________________ Royal Mail refusal to withdraw stamp will lead to mass protests by British Hindus 2 November 2005 - Hindus in Britain are organising new ways of protesting after Royal Mail yesterday refused to consider a request by the Hindu Forum of Britain to withdraw a Christmas stamp featuring Hindus worshipping Jesus Christ. Hindu leaders from national and regional organisations across UK were quick to join the Hindu Forum of Britain in supporting its request for a withdrawal of the stamp. The stamp features the picture of a man and a woman with Hindu markings worshipping baby Christ. The man has a 'tilak' marking on his forehead clearly identifying him as a Vaishnava Hindu and the woman has the traditional 'kumkum' mark on her forehead identifying her as a married Hindu lady. "After Royal Mail refused to withdraw the stamp, Hindu leaders representing some of the largest organisations across UK have informed us that they will take this matter straight to the community to protest about it," explained Ramesh Kallidai, secretary general of the Hindu Forum of Britain. "It has now caused even greater resentment since Royal Mail had not even originally consulted us before the stamp was issued. We could easily have offered them advice on a suitable depiction of the Mother and Child image that would not have offended anybody." The stamp is priced at 68 p, which is the amount of postage for letters to India. "They have shown utter disregard for the issue of evangelical conversions in India," explained Jo Thanki President of the Hindu Council of Birmingham. "Many newspapers in India have reported that evangelical churches linked to terrorist organisations in the North West region of India have intimidated tribals at gun points into conversion. It is therefore a deeper issue that Royal Mail seem to have not addressed." "We strongly object to the stamp depicting a Hindu couple worshiping Baby Christ. We are followers of a culture which respects all religious and beliefs but this type of depiction is denigrating and undermines our religious sentiments," said Kishore Ruparelia, General Secretary of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad UK and Europe. "We strongly advise Royal Mail to withdraw this stamp otherwise we intend to bring out a mass demonstration to protest abbout it. This is a deliberate attempt to dilute the thinking of ordinary Hindus." Hindu leaders now plan to start mass mailing of letters without stamps to the Royal Mail headquarters to clog the post office at Old Street, letters of protest by email to the Royal Mail and DTI and lobbying with friendly Parliamentarians. If Royal Mail continue their refusal to withdraw the stamp a mass protest outside their headquarters in London is also being planned. "We cannot accept the Royal Mail argument that the stamps have been distributed and cannot be recalled," confirmed Ratilal Chohan, General Secretary of the Hindu Council of the North. "If they had been a food chain with a product containing cancer causing agents on the shelves of their outlets, would they not withdraw them?" A Royal Mail spokesperson confirmed on BBC today that they had consulted the Museum in Mumbai where the painting hangs, but could have done more to consult Hindus widely. Hindu leaders identified that Royal Mail had the necessary information technology and resources to withdraw the stamp but did not seem willing to use it. "Royal Mail have appropriate distributed systems software to send a message to every Post Office counter asking them to stop sale of the stamp," explained Venilal Vaghela, Chair of the Hindu Council of Brent. "Yet they are showing unwillingness to withdraw it and this does not sound good enough." "We are appalled and shocked that they chose to do this without consulting the community," commented Sheila Maharaja, spokesperson for the Hindu Human Rights group. "Now they are saying that they cannot even request Post Office counters to stop selling them by sending a simple message that will take them ten minutes to create. This is the height of irresponsible behaviour in public service." "Royal Mail explained that it was a piece of art and could therefore not be offensive," said Raman Barber, President of the Sanatan Hindu Temple in Leicester. "But just because something is a piece of art does not mean it is appropriate to be put on public display in a way that offends people. I have seen portraits of Jesus Christ offering respects to Lord Krishna as His Supreme Father. While they are perfectly appropriate inside a Hindu temple, it would be unacceptable for it to be used as a stamp." <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 11-02-2005 <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>HHR Press Release: Is The Royal Mail Stamping out Hinduism ??</b> We at Hindu Human Rights would like to express our growing concern at the reaction of the Royal Mail to protests by Hindu groups here in the UK. For those that are not aware of the situation, the Royal Mail has issued Christmas stamps depicting an offensive painting of Hindus worshipping Jesus. So far the Royal Mail has shown a dismissive and apathetic attitude towards the concerns expressed by the Hindu community and it is for this reason that we have chosen to voice our opinion on this matter. We ask the Royal Mail to take the concerns of the Hindu community seriously and to reconsider their refusal to approach the Hindu community over this issue. Further, we request the immediate withdrawal from sale of the said offensive stamps. To our knowledge the Royal Mail has not consulted with any mainstream Hindu organisation or group before deciding to use Hindu imagery for their Christmas stamps. It is precisely because of this ignorant behaviour, which we have found to be quite prevalent, that we find ourselves in this situation. For many this may seem like a trivial and harmless matter but we ask people to look into the wider context of this issue. There is a deep irony in that, because while the Royal Mail is issuing stamps depicting Hindus with tilaks (head markings) worshipping the Jesus, Hindus in Christian-dominated North-eastern India are banned from even walking down the street with those tilaks and face attacks from Christian Extremists if they even dare to openly perform any Hindu worship. It is for this reason that we also request Royal Mail and the British Government to publicly investigate and uncover right wing Christian groups operating here in the UK, who prey on the innocent public to raise and transfer funds (most probably using Royal Mail) to promote intolerant, extremist and even terrorist behaviour in India. Their aim obviously being the destruction of indigenous cultures around the world and in particular, that of Hinduism and Hindu civilization in India. This is clearly illustrated on Evangelical television channels and websites which repeatedly defame Hinduism as being satanic and a demon worshipping cult that needs to be cleansed by the mass-conversion programs of the Christian missions which happen to be heavily funded by the Western countries. If they have their way, soon there won't be any Hindus left to worship Hindu Deities, just like the fate of the indigenous Deities and philosophies of Africa and other continents. We ask the Royal Mail and the British Government to consider the plight of those Hindus in North-Eastern India who have not been able to celebrate Diwali this year in the fear of being attacked in the name of Christ. Thanking You Hindu Human Rights <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 11-03-2005 <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--> <b> Kidnappings of Hindu girls reaches fever-pitch in Pak</b> 2005-11-03 Published by new kerala.com Gathered by Staff Reporter KARACHI,NOVEMBER 3: Pakistan Human Rights Commission (PHRC) has expressed deep concerns at the recent rise in the number of kidnappings of Hindu girls, especially in the Punjab province. An HRCP release issued here yesterday stated that as many as 19 girls, mostly from Punjab, were missing from their homes. <b>Condemning the practice of kidnapping of Hindu girls and their forcible conversions</b>, the Commission charged the Pakistan government of being incapable of handling this issue, and that such practice was against constitutional provisions of the country. <b>Relatives of these young girls had reasons to believe that they had been kidnapped and being forced to change their religion, the Dawn quoted the PHRC as saying in the release. The Commission also urged the federal government to take immediate action on each reported kidnapping case of Hindu girls.</b><!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - agnivayu - 11-03-2005 In France, Hinduism is not recognized as a religion [While Islam and Buddism are], so I am very happy to see Islamofascists rioting in that country of bigots. Hindu Human Rights - Bharatvarsh - 11-06-2005 <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Daily Mirror 5 November 2005 JESUS STAMP AXED A 68p Christmas stamp has been withdrawn after Hindus claimed it was offensive. The stamp depicts the Virgin Mary with traditional Hindu markings on her forehead worshipping the baby Jesus. Royal Mail said stocks of the stamp bearing the 17th century painting from Mumbai, India, will run out in three days and only be available on request.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Finally something good happened, UK Hindus are showing the way and are ahead in Hindu activism more than any country, Hindus in other countries need to follow suit, it really is surprising that Hindus in India are the most servile (they couldn't even do anything about m.f hussains paintings) while the diaspora Hindus (especially in UK) are moving ahead. Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 11-06-2005 Hindus of India are brainwashed. Hindu Human Rights - agnivayu - 11-06-2005 The UK will become an Islamic Country soon, or atleast will have a 'partition' to create a mini Pakistan within it. <!--QuoteBegin-Mudy+Nov 6 2005, 10:37 AM-->QUOTE(Mudy @ Nov 6 2005, 10:37 AM)<!--QuoteEBegin-->Hindus of India are brainwashed. [right][snapback]40712[/snapback][/right] <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 11-13-2005 http://ww1.mid-day.com/news/world/2005/november/123248.htm <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Pak Hindu girls forced to convert to Islam   By: Hasan Mansoor   November 13, 2005 <img src='http://ww1.mid-day.com/ArticleImages/images58/burkha.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' /> When a Hindu girl is converted to Islam, hundreds of extremists belonging to religious parties such as Maulana Fazlur Rehmanâs Jamiat-e-Ulema Islam (JUI), take to the streets and chant religious slogans Karachi: An alarming trend â that of Muslims kidnapping Pakistani Hindu girls and forcing them to convert to Islam â in Pakistanâs Sindh province is forcing the worried resident Hindu community to marry off their daughters as soon as they are of marriageable age or to migrate to India, Canada or other nations. Recently, at least 19 such abduction cases have occurred in Karachi alone, while several others have been reported in the media. Sanao Menghwar, a Hindu resident of Karachiâs Punjab Colony, is a traumatised man; all three of his daughters âAishwarya, Reena and Reema â have been kidnapped and forced to convert to Islam. In the police complaint that he filed at the behest of the Panchayat after two days of futile searching for his daughters, he stated that when he and his wife returned home from work, they discovered their daughters had gone missing. The police arrested three Muslim youths in connection with the crime, who were later granted bail by a court because theyâre minors. Menghwarâs daughters continue to remain missing. âKidnapping Hindu girls like this has become a normal practice. The girls are then forced to sign stamp papers stating that theyâve become Muslims,â says Laljee Menghwar, a member of the Hindu Panchayat in Karachi. According to him, the Pakistani government needs to examine and put a stop to the social oppression of religious minorities in the country. âHindus here are too frightened to vent their anger â they fear victimisation. But we have now decided to go public with these cases and demand justice,â Laljee says. Their cause has found support in the Pakistani Christian community, who carried out a demonstration with them in Karachi, protesting against this crime. Similarly startling incidents have occurred in several districts of Sindh and evoked identical responses. At least six Hindu girls met this fate a few months ago in Jacobabad (a tribal area heavily inhabited by Hindus) and Larkana districts. Sapna, the daughter of one Seth Giyanchand, was recently taken to a shrine (Amrote in Shikarpur district) by Shamsuddin Dasti. Dasti, a Muslim friend of Sapnaâs brother, is a married man and father of two. Nevertheless, the custodian of the shrine, Maulvi Abdul Aziz lost no time in converting Sapna to Islam (her names was changed to âMehekâ) and marrying her to Dasti. The case came to light only when Sapnaâs parents stated that their daughter hadnât eloped but been abducted. Human rights activists, such as Nuzhat Shirin who belongs to the Aurat Foundation, says that religious extremism is rapidly increasing in Jacobabad and other Sindh districts. Extremists in turn encourage shrines, which are involved with forced conversions. When a Hindu girl is converted to Islam, hundreds of extremists belonging to religious parties such as Maulana Fazlur Rehmanâs Jamiat-e-Ulema Islam (JUI), take to the streets and chant religious slogans. In Sapnaâs case, when she was presented in court with Dasti, extremists showered rose petals on them and loudly chanted religious slogans. The fanaticism was so daunting that Sapna was too frightened to even speak with her own parents who were also present in the courtroom. At that, Maulvi Aziz, who was also standing in the courtroom, was said to have remarked, âHow can a Muslim girl live and maintain contact with kafirs (infidels)?â Sapnaâs story sparked widespread demonstrations by the Hindu community. Presidents and mukhis of Panchayats from various towns and districts met in Jacobabad to discuss this serious issue. Activists and leaders from educated segments of society strongly criticised the role of religious leaders, like Maulvi Aziz, in these forced conversion cases. Still, the threat of victimisation by Muslims is palpable; Shirin says when forced conversion cases make it to court, lawyers themselves avoid taking them up, fearing a backlash from maulvis. Giyanchand meanwhile has said that he has no other option but to migrate to India â it will be difficult for him to find grooms for his other daughters because of Sapnaâs controversial conversion. And forced conversions are not the only problem that the Hindu minority (there are 2.7 million Hindus in Pakistan; Pakistanâs total population is 140 million) is facing in the country. A powerful syndicate of bandits and patrons in the northern districts of Sindh regularly kidnap rich Hindus for ransom. They not kill hostages if the ransom doesnât arrive on time, they even kill some despite their ransom being paid. Sadham Chand Chawla, the former president of the Hindu Panchayat, Jacobabad, was abducted and murdered. His killers remain at large despite enormous protests. Following his murder, his family had received several threats until they secretly migrated to India.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 11-18-2005 I don't know where would this go but in any case ... Check out this website: http://sanatan.org/en/05/Protests/MFHusain/index.php for <b>naked pictures of Hindu gods as drawn by "famous" M F Husain.</b> Don't forget to sign the petition Some interesting images: <img src='http://sanatan.org/en/05/Protests/MFHusain/images/Picture1.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' /> <img src='http://sanatan.org/en/05/Protests/MFHusain/images/Picture2.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' /> <img src='http://sanatan.org/en/05/Protests/MFHusain/images/Picture7.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' /> Admin move it to the appropriate place if needed. Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 11-21-2005 <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Press Release â <b>Hindu Human Rights Protest on Sunday 18 December 2005 to the Pakistan Government for Human Rights Abuses upon the Hindu Minority</b> 20 November 2005, London The recent upsurge in the kidnappings of Hindu women and girls in Pakistan has raised deep concerns about the rights and future of the Hindu minority in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. Reports suggest that murders and lootings of Hindus have also been on the increase in Pakistan. Numerous Hindu temples have been vandalised or destroyed in the last few years. The small Hindu minority lives in constant fear of persecution and harassment in Pakistan. Yet the authorities have failed in every case to take action against known criminals and have yet to lift a finger to help find those Hindus who are still missing. Indeed, the constitution and legal system of the country openly discriminates against the Hindu minority. Enough is enough and it is time for all civilised people to stand up and let their voices be heard in a protest to the Pakistani authorities. Before independence from colonial rule, in 1947, Hindus made up approximately 25% of the population of what became Pakistan. Even after the Partition of the Indian Sub-continent, Hindus were still a 15% minority in that region. Today, repeated genocide and ethnic cleansing has forced the number of Hindus down to below 2% of the population â however this represents more than 5 times the number of Hindus living here in the UK. Join us to protest against the ongoing Human Rights abuses against the Hindu minority in Pakistan on Sunday 18 December 2005 from 12 pm onwards outside the Pakistan High Commission, 34-36 Lowndes Square, London. Nearest tube station: Knightsbridge (Piccadilly line). Hindu Human Rights Serving Hindus Worldwide <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 12-02-2005 <b>Hindus in Pakistan: What the History Books Wonât Tell You</b> <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->n    There is a lack of awareness across the world about the very existence of a significant yet dwindling Hindu community in Pakistan. Presently it is estimated that Hindus make up 2% of Pakistanâs population. This is at least five times the number of Hindus in Britain. n    Before the end of colonial rule in 1947, the land that was to become Pakistan had a large proportion of Hindus, accounting for over 26% of the population. The Partition of India was the biggest forced migration of people in human history, and was accompanied by large scale massacres. During this period, the population of Hindus dropped to 15% in this region. n    Even though there was heavy risk, many Hindus chose to remain in their ancestral homeland and were promised protection by the Government of Pakistan. However in practice, Hindus found it very difficult to live in Pakistan, where they were very vulnerable and often subject to persecution. n    There was a constant level of crime and harassment against Hindus in Pakistan. The constitution and legal system that was framed for the new country openly discriminated against Hindus. During periods of tension between India and Pakistan, Hindus were killed and expelled in large numbers. In 1965 a law was passed that openly incited and legitimised confiscation of Hindu property. This was called âThe Enemy Property Actâ. Therefore the Hindu population steadily dropped. n    During 1970 and 1971, huge massacres were perpetrated upon Hindus, by the Pakistani army. A proper study into the casualty figures has never been conducted. Estimates for the number dead are up to 3 million. Millions of Hindu women were raped and kidnapped in this period. It was one of the largest massacres in recent history, and also one of the most ignored. n    In 1977, General Zia ul-Haq led a military coup in Pakistan. He introduced Islamic Law, which further excluded and marginalised Hindus. n    In 1989 and 1992 over 300 Hindu temples were destroyed. Many Hindus lost their homes. The largest outward migration of Hindus from Pakistan since Partition took place during these years. n    Unbelievable as it may seem, Hindus still exist in Pakistan, numbering over 2.5 million. The Hindu population is largest in the Sindh province, but there are Hindu communities dotted all over Pakistan. They suffer constant threats against their security, property and lives. Hindus in Pakistan have to live a very low profile existence, and have to put up with many insults to their honour and dignity, with no legal safeguards. They authorities in the country rarely intervene to help Hindus, and often make matters worse. There are regular reports of kidnapping of Hindu women and children, looting of Hindu property, and other forms of discrimination, persecution and dehumanisation. n    Unfortunately the international media and human rights groups do not take much of an interest in all this. Together with the apathy of the general public around the world, this has meant that the Hindus of Pakistan remain a forgotten and voiceless people. The brutality that has been melted out to the Hindus in Pakistan knows few parallels in history. <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> <b>Until decent minded people across the world show concern for the fate of the helpless and speak out for those without a voice, there is little hope for the Hindu men, women and children who remain in Pakistan.</b> Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 12-04-2005 <!--QuoteBegin-AbhimanyuG+Nov 18 2005, 09:14 PM-->QUOTE(AbhimanyuG @ Nov 18 2005, 09:14 PM)<!--QuoteEBegin-->I don't know where would this go but in any case ... Check out this website: http://sanatan.org/en/05/Protests/MFHusain/index.php for <b>naked pictures of Hindu gods as drawn by "famous" M F Husain.</b> Don't forget to sign the petition ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Admin move it to the appropriate place if needed. [right][snapback]41493[/snapback][/right] <!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> <b> This hussain bloke is extremely sick person. A street loafer who was made a hero by Indians, is paying back to his country by manifesting his mental pervertness here</b>! Hindu Human Rights - Bharatvarsh - 12-09-2005 <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Hindus in Pakistan The Pioneer Edit Desk The recent abduction and conversion of three Hindu girls in Pakistan clearly shows that, despite the isolated example of a Danish Kaneria playing for the country's cricket team, Hindus there are a marginalised and persecuted lot stalked constantly by insecurity. The details are shocking. The three - Reena (21), Usha (19) and Rima (17) - who lived in Karachi's Punjab Colony along with their parents and two other siblings, went missing from October 18, 2005. As the local police station refused to lodge an FIR, they approached the Deputy Superintendent of Police, Clifton, who forced the Station House Officer to register a case. Accordingly an FIR was recorded on October 22 and three young men of the locality were mentioned as suspects. Almost immediately thereafter, the family began receiving threats and, within days, it received, through courier service, three affidavits by the three girls stating that they had converted to Islam on their free will and wanted to live separately. They had been, according to the affidavits, renamed Ahsan, Anam and Nida and were living in a hostel of madarsa Taleem-ul-Quran and were instructed by a local moulvi. That the affidavits were signed under duress became clear when the parents, Sanno and Champa Amra, finally managed to meet their abducted daughters following a court order on November 10 directing the police and the administration of the madarsa to arrange a meeting. In the presence of a dour woman, a moulvi and several cops, which most certainly prevented the girls from speaking their mind, the three, covered head to foot in burqa, and with only their eyes visible, said in subdued voices that they wanted to stay where they were. The youngest girl's eyes were bloodshot with crying. The unfolding of events has been recalled in some detail because it underlines two things. The first is the tragedy of three young girls, abducted, forcibly converted and made to live in the hostel of a madarsa - where no one knows what is being done to them - away from their parents and siblings. The second is the reminder they provide of the continuing persecution of minorities - mainly Hindus, Christians and Ahmadiyyas - in Pakistan who live hunted and terrorised lives in the shadow of the threats of prosecution under the Blasphemy Act which carries a death penalty, desecration of their shrines, forcible conversions and physical violence. All civilised Governments must pressure Pakistan to have the three girls restored to their parents, punish their abductors and provide an environment in which the minorities can live in peace and honour. The Government of India and the human rights organisations in this country, which have been hyper-active in defence of minority rights and condemnation of "communal" elements, have a bounden duty to take up the case of the three girls and minority rights with Pervez Musharraf's regime - and in all international fora should it prove unresponsive. Silence and inaction on the ground that it is Pakistan's internal matter and making an issue of it will have an adverse bearing on India-Pakistan relations which are on the threshold of a stunning improvement, will not wash. If such considerations have not prevented Islamabad from trying to internationalise the totally spurious issue of human rights violation in Jammu & Kashmir, there is no reason why India's United Progressive Alliance Government should not make a global issue of the case of the three girls and persecution of minorities in Pakistan. http://dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?main_...t&counter_img=1<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--> Hindu Human Rights - Mitra - 12-09-2005 K.Ram Can you give us a good link for this Hindu genocide of 1970-71 in Pakistan? Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 12-09-2005 i can. http://www.gendercide.org/case_bangladesh.html http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Styx/7297/files/article2.htm http://www.virtualbangladesh.com/bd_hol.html (VERY GOOD) http://www.secularislam.org/bangladesh/hasan2.htm (IMP READ) http://humanists.net/avijit/article/shafiq...t_genocide1.htm (EXTREMELY WELL WRITTEN) http://www.mukto-mona.com/new_site/mukto-m...cs_genocide.htm http://www.hindunet.org/hindu_history/mode...ndu_bangla.html http://banglapedia.search.com.bd/HT/G_0075.HTM http://www.engr.uconn.edu/~faisal/Genocide.html (CHILLING PIC) http://www.hvk.org/articles/0102/45.html http://www.e-mela.com/lekha/article/Farooq...1_20030331.html http://www.hinduamericanfoundation.org/Con...bangladesh.html http://www.hinduhumanrights.org/Bangladesh/kennedy.htm http://www.sepiamutiny.com/sepia/archives/001786.html (IMP INFO) google for more Hindu Human Rights - Guest - 12-10-2005 The first link too has a chilling pic. <img src='http://www.gendercide.org/images/pics/bangla1.jpg' border='0' alt='user posted image' /> |