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Kamis, 10 Juni 2010

India relaxes visa norms for select Pakistanis including Hindus, Sikhs and other minorities

Source Sify News
Thursday, June 10, 2010
 (PHOTO : Indian/Pakistan Border near Punjab State of Indian Side with Pakistani Sikh)
New Delhi : India on Thursday relaxed visa extension norms for a select category of Pakistan nationals, including Hindus, Sikhs and other minorities who have come to the country seeking Indian citizenship.

The other categories of Pakistanis for whom norms have been relaxed include women married to Indian nationals and staying in India, and Indian women married to Pakistani nationals but who have returned after their spouse's death or divorce, said the union home ministry.

Visa can also be extended in cases of extreme compassion, a home ministry statement said.

It, however, added that the relaxed visa extension rules will be applicable only for those who are already in India or likely to come here before the end of this year.

The statement said that all states and union territories have been asked not to insist upon validity of Pakistani passports, as per the latest statutory provisions notified by the ministry on May 15, 2010, under the Passport (Entry into India) Act, 1920.

The statement said the decision has been taken after consultation with the ministry of external affairs and the ministry of law and justice.

"Accordingly, it has been decided to grant exemption to a select category of Pakistan nationals from the provisions of Rule 3 of the Passport (Entry into India) Act, 1920. An order to this effect has been notified on May 15, 2010," the statement said.

The ministry added that it is further contemplating to provide this facility to male Muslim citizens of India who migrated to Pakistan during partition leaving behind their family but came back on a valid Pakistani passport, but could not get their passports renewed.

Pointing out that there are thousands of such people in Kerala, the home ministry statement said they were unable to get their passports renewed as the Pakistan High Commission refused to do so in the absence of a Computerised National Identity Card.

"Pakistan issues Computerised National Identity Cards to their nationals and extends validity of passports in respect of only those nationals who possess the identity card," said the home ministry statement.

Some such Pakistan nationals could not get their passports renewed because of sheer poverty, said the home ministry, adding that it has decided to examine the pleas of such people to extend their visa, pending a decision on their pleas for Indian citizenship.

Kamis, 27 Mei 2010

Movement for Rights of the Religious Minorities (Hindus) in Pakistan Missing ???

By Gopinath Kumar (PHP editor from USA)
Thursday,May 27,2010
(Pakistani Hindus celebrate Holi in Karachi City,Sindh)
Pakistan : The tectonic events of the past few years - including September the ‘11’ and the war against terrorism in Afghanistan, Iraq, and beyond - have dramatically affected the Muslims and their attitudes toward the non-Muslims in general. However, some of the dynamics that are influencing the socio-cultural environment in Muslim countries and especially in Pakistan are also the product of trends that have been at work for many decades.
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Falsely presumed religious mission and self-proclaimed righteousness has provided a vehicle through which different governments/leaders have sought legitimacy to discriminate against the non-Muslims. Some of the political parties even contest elections around an agenda of Islamizing the state and reforming the society around religious lines. Based on the ideology of two nation theory, the notion that a separate country "only" for the Muslims where they can live according to their own religious values has indeed proved lethal for the possibility of co-existence with other faiths for all times to come. It is predominantly a Muslim country but we need to be mindful of the existence of Christians, Bahais, Buddhists, Hindus, Jains, Parsis and Sikhs who identify themselves as non-Muslim but true Pakistanis.
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In the past two decade or so, religion has become increasingly intertwined in the political turmoil that envelops Pakistan. The Hindu and Sikh community in Pakistan are very much under represented and is inherently sub divided into various castes. AA while siding with the poorest of the poor will work with the scheduled class hindus all across Pakistan. Their representative groups will be formed at the provincial level and strengthened to amplify their political voice and bring their grievances to the public fore will help us to promote diversity and ensure their rights. Capacity building of these groups will be done especially to empower them to participate in the upcoming census in 2010.
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This campaign will contribute in increasing their participation in the national process as it provide the base of fiscal settings, services and programs provided to remote communities.

Jumat, 21 Mei 2010

New Reports on Religious Freedom For Minorities In Pakistan Lacking

By Dr.Yogeshvar Dubay (PHP U.K.)
Friday,May 21,2010
(In Karachi on April 11, 2008  Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) strongly condemns brutal killing of Jagdish Kumar (Hindu man) for alleged blasphemy, demands judicial inquiry, But so far nothing has been done)
Brussels (Europe) : The European parliament has expressed its concern over the lack of religious freedom for the minorities in Pakistan and has asked Pakistan to review its blasphemy laws.

The resolution by the EP came yesterday. The EP has asked Pakistan to review the process of inclusion of religion of its citizens in passports.

Other positive measures taken by the Pakistani government, however, have been appreciated by the EP. In November 2008, the Pakistani government reserved five percent seats for minorities in the sectors of federal jobs. Minorities inPakistan comprise of the Hindus, Sikhs, Shias, Ahmadis, Buddhists, and Parsis.

The government has also started recognizing non Muslim public holidays. Also a “National Minorities Day” is celebrated in the country. All these measures have been welcomed by the EP.

Kamis, 20 Mei 2010

Today in History , Lets Tribute to Hindus of Afghanistan

By Gopinath (USA) and Daleep Bhai Kochhar (Kabul City)
Thusday,May 20,2010

2001 - In Afghanistan, the ruling Taliban militia announce a law requiring Hindus to wear identity labels to distinguish them from Muslims. The measure also requires Hindu women to be veiled for the first time.

Here is More Info - Afghan Hindus and Blog on Afghan Hindus

(Aug.1992: A Hindu family who fled to Pakistan after they were brutalized by the Jehadi criminals in Kabul. Fighters from different criminal factions looted property, raped women, murdered, kidnapped people for ransom and committed many other horrible crimes against Non-Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus. These conditions have forced millions of people to flee from Afghanistan in order to save their lives and belongings)
(2002© IRIN – Daulat Ram and his family at their home in the backstreets of Kandahar,Afghanistan)

Rabu, 19 Mei 2010

Hindus, Muslims celebrate ‘Malmaas’ in Jammu Kashmir , India

Source http://www.indiatalkies.com
Wednesday,May 19,2010
Anantnag (Jammu and Kashmir), May 10 : Promoting communal harmony and brotherhood, Hindus and Muslims celebrated ‘Malmaas’, the extra month in the Hindu calendar, at the famous Martand Teerth Shrine in Jammu and Kashmir’s Anantnag District on Monday.

Kashmiri Hindus expressed their joy over the involvement of both Muslims and Sikhs.

“After 20 years, I have seen such rush at the temple which used to be there earlier. I am feeling very happy as local Muslims and Sikhs are with us,” said B L Koul, a Kashmiri Hindu.

Kashmiri Hindus used to visit this temple earlier, but with the advent of militancy in the state, many chose to migrate to more peaceful environs.

“Malmaas comes after every two-and-half years. To attend this festival, people come from Jammu and Delhi. This time the festival was celebrated very well,” claimed Kamaljeet Kachru, one of the organizers.

“After the migration of the Kashmiri Hindus, this is the first time I have seen this festival being organized. These Hindu brothers of ours are welcome,” said Altaf Ahmad, a local of Mattan.

“We want them (Hindus) to come back, so that we can live with brotherhood and harmony. We are happy that they came here and celebrated this festival of Malmaas,” he added. (ANI)

Senin, 05 April 2010

Call for repeal of < blasphemy law > in Pakistan

Source http://www.dawn.com
Monday,April05,2010
This picture taken on September 15, 2009, shows Pakistani Christian Almas Hameed (R) and his brother Shahbaz Ahmed standing in their burnt-out house in Gojra. Almas Hameed lost seven relatives when an angry mob burnt down his home in a rampage against Pakistan's minority Christian community. — AFP

KARACHI: An American Muslim scholar and international minorities’ rights activist visiting here urged the Pakistan government on Friday to reform and eventually repeal all laws believed to be discriminatory against minority groups in the country. 

Delivering a lecture on ‘State of religious freedom in South Asia’ at the Pakistan Institute of International Affairs, Safiya Ghori said these laws had ambiguous language and flaws liable to be misused by individuals and groups to promote their own agendas.

Citing the example of last year’s Gojra incident, when a mob of extremists burnt alive at least seven persons in arson attacks on a church and homes of Christians, she said the misuse of the blasphemy laws could entail similar horrendous acts in the future too.

The young advocate of Muslims’ rights in the United States and once herself the victim of religious discrimination in America, she said Islam is a tolerant religion, Pakistani society as a whole is non-violent and a majority of people are open-minded believing in religious diversity. But, she added, a few pockets of extremism here were active against minority groups, be they Christians, Hindus or Sikhs.

She also referred to the laws concerning women enacted under General Zia-ul-Haq and said they must also be rolled back.

She said she had met members of some non-governmental organisations, and praised the NGOs movement for wresting various rights from the state, particularly women’s and minorities’ quotas in parliament.

She said she had met some young persons here also and “the young generation is more enlightened and articulate … wearing western clothes and speaking English as (fluently) I do.” But she was critical of Pakistan’s education system. She said on the one hand there were elite education institutions and, on the other, government schools and madressahs. So, naturally their students had different mindsets and ways of thinking. In this regard she praised the single, public education system back in her own country.

Ms Ghori also condemned the 2002 massacre of Muslims in the Indian state of Gujarat, where marauders killed more than 2,000 people, and said the state of minorities such as Muslims, Sikhs and Christians was no better in that country. She, however, admitted that she did not know much about the state of minorities in South Asian countries such as Sri Lanka and Nepal.

She said persecution on the basis of faith must end wherever it existed. She also said that Shias in Afghanistan were being dealt with unfairly. So were the followers of the Ahmadi faith in Pakistan.

Safiya Ghori, a Joint Juris Doctor and Master of Arts from the University of Arkansas, said good and bad people existed in every religion and condemning a whole community for the acts of a few was wrong. And that was what she was trying to impress on the people and authorities in the United States. She said she was fighting for the Muslims’ legal rights in the US and was engaged with some NGOs trying to better the perception about Muslims at the grassroots level.

At the end of the lecture, she answered questions from the audience, particularly about her article titled: The application of religious laws in North American courts: A case study of Mutaa marriages. Masooma Hasan was the moderator at the discussion.

Ms Ghori most recently served as the South Asia Policy Analyst at the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom. Earlier, she served as Government Relations Director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council in Washington, DC.

Selasa, 23 Maret 2010

Sikh hostage of Taliban is free now ,Pakistan

Source http://www.pakistanchristianpost.com
Tuesday,March23,2010
Pakistan: "In this photo made on March 19, 2010, Surjeet Singh, sits with family members after his release in Peshawar. Singh, who had been kidnapped for ransom by alleged militants, was freed after 42 days as a result of a crackdown operation by Pakistani Army.

Senin, 22 Maret 2010

Kidnapping reflects fears of Pakistan minorities

Source http://www.dawn.com
Monday, 22 Mar, 2010
In a country beset by a powerful Islamist insurgency, where suicide bombings are commonplace and government offensives widely dismissed as ineffective, anyone can become a victim. – Reuters Photo 

PESHAWAR: Five Sikh men who fled their hometown on the Afghan border were making a quick trip back home when masked men blocked their way with a pickup on a mountain road not far from the Khyber Pass.

There were no houses, no buildings, no other cars in sight. The kidnappers covered their faces with black scarves and carried machine-guns.

Surjeet Singh had just wanted to check on the small grocery store he had left behind in Dabori, the Pakistani town he fled a year ago when it was overrun with Taliban fighters and the government launched a bombing campaign against them. In an area torn by Islamist violence, it had quickly become a dangerous place for a non-Muslim.

Singh and the four friends traveling with him that day all wore the carefully wrapped turbans that made their Sikh religion clear.

They were going back to pick up money they were owed, or to check on their businesses. They had called friends ahead of time to check on the situation. They thought a quick trip would be safe.

“We were born there. We grew up there,” said Singh, who today is recovering from a bullet wound in a small apartment in a crowded maze-like neighborhood of Peshawar, the largest city in Pakistan’s northwest. “Our forefathers had been there for hundreds of years. We have houses, shops, land.”

In today’s Pakistan, though, that is not enough.

In a country beset by a powerful Islamist insurgency, where suicide bombings are commonplace and government offensives widely dismissed as ineffective, anyone can become a victim. But for the nation’s minorities – its small communities of Hindus, Christians and Sikhs – life is particularly precarious. Thousands have fled their villages, crowding into urban slums. Thousands more have fled the country.

“With the rise in militancy in our society in general, and in the northwest in particular, minorities are feeling more threatened,” said I.A. Rehman, a senior official with Pakistan’s Human Rights Commission. He noted that many Sikhs have been driven from their homes, and those that remain are now often forced to pay the militants a “jizya” – a traditional tax for non-Muslim.

Singh’s journey, which began on a cold morning in January and ended 42 days later with a March 1 bloody gunbattle, underscores the threats to those minorities, as well as the lawlessness of Pakistan's frontier regions.

Two months later, it’s still not clear exactly why the Sikhs were targeted: Were the bandits waiting for them? Would they have kidnapped anyone who came by?

Certainly their religion made them easier targets, since it is more difficult for them to make use of the region’s informal power networks, the tribal and religious leaders who can protect people in the semiautonomous areas.

On that day, though, as armed men swarmed toward their car, shouting for the five Sikh men to move quickly, all Singh and his friends were thinking about was survival.

Two if them managed to slip away amid the chaos, but three – all sharing the same common Sikh surname, Singh – were quickly captured.

“They held us at gunpoint, immediately dragged us out of our car,” said Surjeet Singh, a quiet composed man. He and his friends were blindfolded and driven for about an hour. Then they began walking.

They could see nothing through their blindfolds. They could only feel cold pressing in as they climbed higher into the Hindu Kush mountains.

After hours of walking, they were brought to a set of rooms carved into the mountainside. It would be their home for the next 42 days. There they would be kept chained and often blindfolded. Occasionally, they were beaten. The prisoners never saw their captors’ faces – which were always covered with scarves – and even now they do not know who they were.

They clearly were militant Muslims, forcibly cutting their prisoners hair. Keeping hair uncut is a deeply important religious precept for Sikh men.

But the real reason for the kidnapping was quickly clear: money.

Surjeet Singh did not want to talk about ransom demands but the other survivor, 18-year-old Gurvinder Singh, told the Times of India newspaper that their captors brought them mobile phones on their first morning in the cave. They were ordered to call their families and say their freedom would cost 50 million rupees, or about $600,000. When it was clear that money could not be raised, the number dropped to 20 million rupees, or $240,000.

After that: nothing. The men made no further phone calls, their captors barely spoke to them. Their days passed in silence.

“Every day was like a month, and a month was like a year,” Singh said.

After a few weeks, Jaspal Singh was suddenly taken away.

The other Sikhs were told he’d been freed. “You will also be released if you give us money,” their captors taunted them.

In the end, though, their captors got nothing.

Twelve days after Jaspal disappeared, the thunder of helicopters filled the air as teams of Pakistani commandos swarmed the camp.

The government has declined all comment on the incident. – AP

Jumat, 19 Maret 2010

Holi festival finds mention in US Congress

Source http://www.ddinews.gov.in
Friday,March19,2010
 Holi, the festival of colours, has found mention in the US Congress with an American lawmaker from New York terming it as a "visually stunning" event.

Holi is a time when communities come together after a long winter to welcome the spring harvest, Congressman Steve Israel said in the House of Representatives.

"It is a visually stunning event with thousands of people tossing coloured powders in the air and using dyed water in an atmosphere where culture, camaraderie and oneness are celebrated.

"In the evening, community bonfires are lit to signify triumph over divisiveness and negativity," Israel said.

It is one of the largest festivals in the world, with over one billion Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and Buddhists participating throughout India, Nepal, the US and many other nations, he said.

As a member of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian Americans, Israel also commended the Hindu American Foundation for educating Americans about Holi and the Hindu faith and join them in recognising this year's Festival of Colours.

Three years ago, the Foundation worked to ensure passage of a resolution recognising another Hindu, Sikh, Jain and Buddhist festival, Diwali, in both the Senate and the HoR.

This latest focus on Holi was a continuation of those efforts, the foundation said in a statement.

  "Congressman Israel has been a longtime member of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian Americans and supporter of our community," said Nikhil Joshi, cofounder and member of the Board of Directors for the Hindu American Foundation.

"We're grateful for his leadership in giving recognition to the importance of Holi to more than one billion people around the world," he said. (HS-19/03)

Kamis, 18 Maret 2010

Forced conversion of Sikhs in Pak taken up with UN

Source http://www.punjabnewsline.com
Thusday,March18,2010
PATIALA: Sikh Nation Organization has raised with United Nations the issue of “undeterred forced converhsion of minority communities in Pakistan” as a result of ‘Shariah Nizam-e-Adl-2009 Regulation’ and continued situation of grave and sustained violation of internationally guaranteed Human Rights, through a petition by invoking Special Procedure of the Human Rights Council.

Dr. Manjit Singh Randhawa, President of the Sikh Body disclosed here today that the issue of forced conversions in Pakistan as direct fall out of ‘Shariah Nizam-e-Adl-2009 Regulation’ has been focused with “execution by beheading” of two Sikhs (Jaspal Singh and Mehal Singh) for refusing to embrace Islam. Sikh body demanded immediate repeal of the controversial Regulation.

The intents of arbitrary dictates that are possible under the powers bestowed upon tyrant ‘Taliban Rulers by Law of Pakistan’, through this regulation stood amply exposed with forcible cutting of hair of other two Sikh captives (Surjit Singh and Gurvinder Singh) to convert them to Islam, who were rescued/escaped or “released with warning to the Sikh Community in Pak.”

The release of Sikh captives was claimed to have occurred as a result of the “rescue operation” by the Pak Army, but intriguingly no details of the operation were officially provided all these days despite the announcement. Though Gurvinder Singh 17 years has supported the rescue version due to obvious reasons, but community sources tell a different story, said Dr. Randhawa.

Dr. Randhawa disclosed that reliable community sources revealed to the Sikh body that they were “released to convey looming peril to all members of Sikh Community” to “either convert to Islam/pay ‘Jiziya’ per head at the rate fixed by ‘Taliban-Rulers’ or be ready to face dreadful future in Pak.”

They were kidnapped “not for ransom but to recover exorbitant ‘Jiziya’ from the Sikh Community.” During captivity they were coerced, tortured and threatened with life, their unshorn hair were forcibly cut to convert them to Islam.

Sources further revealed that the area of captivity is thickly infested with heavily armed Taliban with sophisticated “ground to air strike modern weaponry” that can easily bang any “helicopter” and is practically invincible for any such rescue operation.

That precisely is the reason to prefer drone operations in such areas over extremely fatal conventional air or ground operations, that is why Pak Army chose not to officially provide any details of the “rescue operation,” he added.

Senin, 15 Maret 2010

Pakistani Hindu Women Meena's Story (Discrimination and Persecution)

Source http://www.youtube.com/user/withlovefrompakistan
Monday,March15,2010
Meena's Story - A Thirsty Fish (Urdu/Hindi)

  Meena's Story - A Thirsty Fish (English Translated)


Meena Daya is a 37-years-old Hindu living in Pakistan.

We go to the Shu Shankar Bolanath Hindu temple in Karachi on a , the special day of the week to worship god Bolanath. This god is the caretaker of children and home life. "There is one god. He's just in different, multiple forms but all forms are him," says Daya.

The Hindus believe this temple to be over 5000 years old if not there from the beginning of time. The temple itself is actually a large underground cave with construction in front of it and on top of it. Standing outside the entrance of the temple, one can see the rock of the cave in the right corner with a large picture of Bolanath on the left. The inside looks like an ordinary temple with statues of gods all over till one looks up at the roof; concaved rock.

Daya comes to this temple  to ask Bolanath to give her children health and happiness and to bless her married life. "They are the most important things in life to me, so I pray for them."

Since Bolanath is the god of marital bliss, a lot of young couples, married, or those wishing to be married, come to this temple to pray as well.

Today's worship involves a short black stone with a rounded top. "The stone is a memory of the place Bolanath used to worship at," says Daya. "The rituals performed at the stone were first performed by his wife after he died. First, you touch the place of the stone and run that hand over your head to get the gods blessings, and you prostrate. Then you can pour the milk, break the coconut, spread flowers and light the incense in whichever sequence you please."

Daya works at a hair and beauty salon. She was married into a poor Hindu family and when the time came to put the first child in school, her husband told her there wasn't enough income. "I told him, 'then let me work. It's important our son goes to school.'"

She got a job as a janitor at a school and requested them to admit her son. "They made all kinds of excuses. And then the truth came out. We were Hindu and he would be a janitor's son. I quit the job."

Daya then decided to sell her wedding jewelry and learn the skills of a beautician which would get her a job at a salon.

"The first couple of salons I worked at, things would start off okay. Then gradually some of the women working with me would start complaining to each other 'we read the Quran, what does she do! Worship idols!' They would tell the owner, 'now that you've kept her, you'll have no success in your business because Allah won't send his blessings.' I would eventually be asked to leave."

Daya is happy at her current workplace where even though she's the only Hindu, she's not the only minority. Half the girls working at the salon are Christians.

This clip tells her story, very concisely, in her words.

Jumat, 05 Maret 2010

PAKISTAN: MINORITIES' RIGHTS TO BE PROTECTED

Source http://www.namnewsnetwork.org
March,05,2010

ISLAMABAD, March 5 (NNN-APP) -- Pakistan Acting President Farooq H. Naek said on Thursday that all-out efforts would be made to protect minorities’ rights in the country.

Addressing the participants of Hindu Community at a function arranged by Ministry of Minorities at the auditorium of National Council of the Arts to celebrate Hindu festival, ‘Holi’ he said all people living in Pakistan have equal rights, whether they are Muslims or non-Muslims.

“It is the prime responsibility of every Pakistani to safeguard the basic rights of the minorities as they are playing key role in the progress, development and prosperity of the country”, he said.

He said that soon after the creation of Pakistan, Quaid Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah had stated that all people living in the country are equal.

Naek said that PPP-led government is taking all possible steps for the prosperity and progress of the minorities.

He said the government has allocated five per cent quota for minorities in government jobs, while funds have also been increased for their welfare. He said it has also been decided to celebrate minorities festivals at the government level.

The government, he said has declared Aug 11 as minorities’ day in the country. He said that all religions teach love, peace tolerance and brotherhood. He said Holi is a festival of colour, peace, love and friendship.

The Acting President said that terrorists and extremists have no religion or country and are enemies of humanity.

He said some elements in the country are trying to destabilize the country and democracy adding, “they will not succeed in their nefarious designs.”

He said the country is faced with challenges of coping terrorism and poverty. He urged the masses to help the government in its efforts for tackling these problems.

He said there are two senators from the Hindu community while the same number of Hindus are ministers. Similarly, in Sindh government there is one advisor from the Hindu community. “All these belong to Pakistan Peoples Party”.

Speaking on the occasion, Minister for Minorities Shahbaz Bhatti said that the PPP government is committed for the social uplift of minorities. -- NNN-APP