Karachi: The issue of kidnapping and forced conversion of Hindu girls in Pakistan was raised in the Sindh Assembly when opposition Grand Democratic Alliance’s (GDA) Nand Kumar Goklani filed a private resolution seeking protection of girls belonging to the minority community.

Moved on Tuesday, Kumar’s resolution read: “This House resolves that [the] provincial government takes notice of recent surge of kidnapping of Hindu girls from various districts of Sindh and take steps to arrest the culprits [involved] and give them exemplary punishment and stop forced conversion.”

However, lawmakers belonging to other parties, felt that the resolution should not be restricted to Hindu girls, as girls irrespective of their faiths should be protected from being kidnapped and forcibly converted in Sindh.

Kumar later moved an amended resolution in the House in which he omitted the word ‘Hindu’ from the original resolution. Deputy Speaker Rehana Leghari put the amended resolution before the House, which was passed unanimously.

In his speech, Kumar said “hundreds” of Hindu girls had been kidnapped in recent years and they had been subjected to enforced conversion.

“In a few months this year,” said the GDA lawmaker holding printed photos of some of the victims, “41 girls belonging to Hindu faith have been kidnapped and converted.”

He said girls from his community had been kidnapped from various districts despite the fact that “we are the most ancient community living here for millennia and should be given due security”. He said an amended law to protect the Hindu community drafted and tweaked by him had been lying with the Minority Affairs Department since April with no interest visible on part of the government to present it in the House.

He made it clear that it was not just a matter of scoring points, but, “genuinely we want to live under certain laws that you are not giving to us”.

He referred to a recent statement of Pakistan People’s Party chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari during his visit to Ghotki, in which he had assured the Hindu community of his full protection. “I don’t think that the [PPP] chairman does not want to get that bill passed. His statement clearly indicates that he genuinely wants to protect us. I am sure that we would have not been in such a pathetic state if Mohtarma [former prime minister Benazir Bhutto] was alive today.”

He said the Hindu community should not be pushed to the wall to the extent that they found no way but to migrate from Sindh. “Migration of our people is continuing. We are protesting for protection, but no one is there to ensure us protection.”

Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan’s Mangla Sharma said communities practising minority faiths felt a grave sense of anxiety and insecurity.

She said it was the first time in the past 70 years that Hindu community was protesting in almost every town and city of Sindh. “This is for the first time that Hindu women have taken to streets and everyone knows the reason.”

Sharma said official figures showed that the ratio of minority communities was on a decline because of lack of protection they were being offered. “Our ratio was 3.72 per cent of the total population in 1998 census, which is now 3.57 per cent. [Has] anyone ever [thought] why the ratio of minorities has reduced by 0.15 per cent in the past 20 years?”

She, however, said minority girls were being deceived instead of being forcibly converted. She lamented that politicians from all but the ruling PPP had supported the minorities’ protests.

The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf objected to the word ‘Hindu’ in the resolution, saying such issue was mainly regarded as a social evil instead of saying a particular community was being targeted.