Brutal rape and persecution of Hindu girls in Pakistan continues in 2024

In Shahdadpur, Sanghar district, a horrific crime has shaken even those accustomed to brutality. A six-year-old Hindu girl was reported missing yesterday. Today, her small body was found, bearing the traumatic signs of rape. This appalling incident is not an aberration but part of a terrifying pattern targeting Hindu children.

Just as this tragedy unfolded, another story emerged. Shanti Santosh Meghwar, a 17-year-old Hindu girl, escaped her captor, Muhammad Nazir Ghulam, returning to her family. In court, she bravely recounted her ordeal: kidnapping, forced conversion to Islam, and a marriage against her will.

In a nation founded on religious identity, Pakistan’s Hindu minority face forced conversions, and systemic oppression, particularly its most vulnerable members—young girls.

Her case highlights a sinister trend: the weaponization of conversion. Young Hindu girls, often with little understanding of religion, are coerced into changing their faith. It’s a tactic that exploits their vulnerability, using spiritual identity as a tool for oppression.

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These incidents are not isolated. Data from the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan paints a chilling picture. In 2023 alone, over 1,000 Hindu girls between ages 6 to 17 were reported kidnapped, with many subjected to rape, forced marriage, or murder. The actual numbers are far higher, as many cases go unreported due to fear.

Pakistan’s ideology leaves little room for its Hindu citizens. They’re seen as outsiders in their own land. This perception filters down, making every Hindu a potential target, especially women and girls who are seen as symbols of community honor.

The discrimination extends beyond these horrific crimes. Hindus face widespread marginalization—denied jobs, education, and healthcare. Many live in slums, their temples vandalized, their dead exhumed from cemeteries. Derogatory terms like “kafir” (infidel) are commonplace, reinforcing their status as unwelcome.

Pakistan’s treatment of its Hindu minority is described as a “slow-motion ethnic cleansing.” There is a lack of legal safeguards, and laws against forced conversion are routinely blocked by religious hardliners.

As another Hindu family in Shahdadpur mourns a child lost to unspeakable violence, for Pakistan’s Hindu girls, caught between conversion and death, the answer seems heartbreakingly clear. Their story is not just one of personal tragedy, but a grim reflection of a nation grappling with its own foundational promises.

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