No country for Pakistani Hindus
By Bhavna
Vij-Aurora | India Today
On March
26, 19-year-old Rinkle Kumari, from a village in Sindh, told Chief Justice of
Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry that she had been abducted by a man called
Naveed Shah, and pleaded with the highest court to let her return to her
mother. It was a brave plea. Hindu women in Pakistan are routinely kidnapped
and then forced to convert if they want the respectability of marriage. They
are helpless, as they have neither the numbers nor the political clout to
protect themselves. As Rinkle left the court, she screamed before journalists,
accusing her captors of forcible conversion, before she was hustled away by the
police.
The case
grabbed headlines, generated impassioned editorials, and highlighted the cause
of a persecuted community, the 3.5 million Hindus in Pakistan. It angered
liberals in Pakistan and caused the Dawnnewspaper to take a strong position on
persecution of minorities.
But
Rinkle had dared to raise her voice, and there would be a price to pay. Her
parents in Ghotki village were threatened, her 70-year-old grandfather was shot
at, gun-toting goons roamed outside her house. When she returned to the
Pakistan Supreme Court on April 18, she meekly said she had converted to Islam.
At a packed media briefing in Islamabad's Press Club, with Shah by her side,
the spunk in her snuffed out, she would only say she wants to become an
"obedient" wife.
According
to police records, each month, an average of 25 girls meet Rinkle's fate in
Sindh alone, home to 90 per cent of the Hindus living in Pakistan. Young Hindu
girls are 'marked', abducted, raped, and forcibly converted. Discrimination,
extortion threats, killings and religious persecution are driving the remaining
Hindus out of Pakistan. They had chosen to stay back after Partition; six
decades later, they are no longer welcome.
In
India, they are facing a shock worse than catastrophe-betrayal. The Government
of India refuses to recognise them as refugees and is unmoved by their plight.
In its reply to activist S.C. Agrawal's RTI query on November 1, 2011, on the
status of Pakistani Hindu refugees, the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA)
claimed it was an "internal matter'' of Pakistan. In the same reply, the
Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) admitted that it could not say how many
Pakistani Hindus had emigrated.
According
to Delhi's Foreigners Regional Registration Office (FRRO), there has been a
rapid increase in the number of Hindus coming from Pakistan. Till mid-2011, it
used to be around eight-ten families a month. But in the past 10 months, an
estimated 400 families have come. They are settling down all over India, in
Rajasthan, Punjab and Gujarat. A trickle has become a stream. Hindus, who
accounted for 15 per cent of Pakistan's population in 1947, now constitute a
mere 2 per cent of its 170 million population. Many have migrated, others have
been killed, and yet others forced to convert to survive. In some cases, the
dead have even been denied a proper cremation.
Ask
Meher Chand, 55. He arrived in Delhi on January 21, 2011, with a delegation of
Pakistani Hindus, carrying 135 plastic jars, aboard the Samjhauta Express. The
jars contained the ashes of Hindus who had died in Pakistan, some of them way
back in the 1950s, and stored in Karachi's Hindu Cremation Ground. The remains
were finally allowed their final journey, to be scattered in the Ganga.
Chand
did not return to Pakistan. He joined a group of 200-odd Pakistani Hindus
settled in Jahangirpuri in Delhi. His voice chokes as he talks about what he
faced in Karachi. "My wife died of cancer in 2009, leaving two daughters
behind. One morning, soon after my wife's death, I found my younger daughter,
16 at that time, missing. When I made inquiries, I was told that she had eloped
with a much older man, known to be a goon. She had converted to Islam
overnight. I was allowed to meet her after intervention by some elders. She
cried and hugged me without saying a word. I never believed she eloped. The man
had been eyeing my daughters. I managed to marry the older one in time. This
one was just a child," he trails off. "I wish I had the courage to
fight for my daughter. The kidnappers had private armies and threatened me.
Even the local police did not pay heed. They mocked me on the streets,"
says Chand.
The
Jahangirpuri camp mostly has people who have come from Sindh, Karachi and
Hyderabad. Most of the other refugees from the region are concentrated in
Rajasthan and Gujarat. Some have been here since the 1990s and have still not
got citizenship and accompanying conveniences like a ration card, driving
licence, gas connection, right to buy property and even travelling to another
part of the country, other than the one place their visa permits.
"There
are thousands like me who want to come and settle in India but are constrained
by the border,'' says Chand, sitting in a one-room tenement he shares with
three other refugees. Chand was a hakim (medical practitioner) in Karachi. Even
though he has acquired a small clientele within the camp and nearby, his income
is not even one-fourth of what it used to be.
Others
in his camp feel Chand has spoken more than he ought to. They chide him, saying
he will face problems with the Pakistan High Commission. "Till we get
citizenship of India, we remain Pakistanis, and have to go to the high
commission again and again. Earlier, they used to renew our passport for five
years, now they are doing it on an annual basis. They ask us uncomfortable
questions,'' says a camp resident.
There
are many more like Chand, waiting to flee Pakistan for the safety of their
daughters. Sitting in a well-furnished drawing room of his house in Ghotki,
Sindh, 52-year-old Kishore Kumar is a worried man. Wealth has not provided him
any security. Owner of three textile-ginning factories, and father of two
daughters and a son, he is preparing to leave Pakistan. "It is hard to
leave your place of birth, the place where four generations have been born. But
we have to move now as things have become critical. I love my motherland but I
am shifting to India for the future of my children,'' he tells India Today.
Kumar
expresses concern about his two college-going daughters. "You can't
imagine what it means to be the father of two young girls in a land where
minorities are treated like third-class citizens. I receive extortion calls
from people for hefty sums to ensure my family is not touched, especially my
daughters," he says.
He is
waiting for his visa, which has increasingly become difficult to get. It took
38-year-old Dr Ashok Kumar Karmani three years to get a visa for himself and
his family, enabling passage from Mir Khas in Sindh to Ahmedabad in February
2012.
After
the 2009 Mumbai terror attack, India put curbs on visas from Pakistan. Only one
out of five visa applications gets cleared. "If visa rules are eased, the
majority of Hindus in Sindh would shift to India,'' says Karmani.
Son of a
businessman and a medical graduate from Liaquat Medical College in Karachi,
Karmani was living in a huge bungalow as part of a joint family. Now he hopes
that he, his wife Ramila, a science graduate, and their two children get a
long-term visa soon,and permanent citizenship after they complete seven years
in India. The family is worried about those left behind. "There are dozens
of cases in Sindh where Hindus have become targets of kidnappings and forcible
conversions. It was time to say goodbye," says Karmani.
Indeed,
the prejudice against Hindus runs deep. Lahore High Court Chief Justice Khawaja
Muhammad Sharif is reported to have said that Hindus were responsible for
financing acts of terrorism in Pakistan. A March 18 editorial in Dawn pulled
him up for it: "It may well have been a slip of the tongue by Mr Sharif,
who might have mistakenly said 'Hindu' instead of 'India'- nevertheless, it was
a tasteless remark to say the least.''
There
are other liberal voices. Dr Azra Fazal Pechuho, member of the National
Assembly and elder sister of Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, told India
Today that she believes girls like Rinkle Kumari are being forcibly converted.
"It is true that Hindu girls are being forcibly kept in madrassas in Sindh
and forced to marry Muslims. We have to take steps to end this practice,
including legislation,''
she says.
Among
the latest to flee Pakistan is a group of 145 Hindus who arrived in Delhi in
December 2011 on a pilgrimage (jattha) visa. They managed to extend their visa
and are looking forward to being accepted byIndia as citizens. Staying in
makeshift tents at Majnu ka Tilla in north Delhi, Savitri Devi, 32, gave birth
to her daughter in the camp two months ago. "When policemen come to remind
us we have to leave, I show them my daughter Bharti and tell them to at least
accept her as she was born on Indian soil," she says, nursing the infant
with her older daughter Rani, 3, sitting alongside.
There is
no way that they want to return to Pakistan. "I have been trying for a
visa for the past five years and got it only now, that too only as part of the
jattha,'' says Krishan Lal, 30, as his wife Rukmani makes chapattis nearby. His
three children run around in the camp barefoot, playing with other children.
"Hindus are like fish out of water in Pakistan. They all want to come to
India, hoping to put an end to their miseries-but it is a different story here
altogether,'' he adds.
Krishanlal
Bhatar, 54, who came with his family from Mirpurkhas district of Sindh to
Ahmedabad in 2009, says with folded hands, "We don't want anything from
this country, only security. We shall remain loyal to India forever and die in
this land only.'' Tears roll down his cheek as he recalls his life as a grocery
shop owner in Pakistan. His is the all-too-familiar story of a daughter,
Jaymala, 22, kidnapped, converted and married off to a Muslim farm labourer.
Bhatar
and his family went pillar to post to get her custody. Local Pakistan Peoples
Party politicians whom he approached were either hand in glove with the group
that had kidnapped the girl or too scared. Bhatar managed to file a case and
also went to the court. On the day of the final hearing in the court, over
three dozen Muslim boys gathered, many of them rifles in hand. A trembling
Jaymala was brought before him and his wife. She didn't even look at them and
just told the woman judge, "I don't know them.''
Pujari
Lal, 31, came from Kohat near Peshawar in 1999 and settled in Khanna, Punjab.
He fled after his teenaged sister was kidnapped and raped. He does not feel
comfortable talking about it but dwells in detail on the problems in Khanna.
There are around 1,200 Hindus and Sikhs settled in Khanna. "It has been 13
years but I still don't have Indian citizenship. My papers have come back a
dozen times. They want proof of my parents' date of birth and birthplace. My
father is dead; my mother is with me but we do not have all the papers,"
he says.
Lal
sells tomatoes and chillies in the crowded wholesale vegetable market in
Khanna. Pakistani refugees run the mandi here. The relatively better-off ones
have bigger shops, and can afford to do the running around between the
Government offices, the Pakistan High Commission and FRRO. They are thrilled
that one among them, Data Ram, 33, recently got a no-objection certificate from
both the Pakistan High Commission and the home ministry, making him eligible
for citizenship. Now he needs Rs 6,000 each for his five family members as
passport forteiture fee and is in the process of "arranging the
money". Having finished high school, Ram is one of the most educated
persons there. He says he had kept all his papers meticulously, making it
easier for him to get citizenship. They all come to Ram for advice. He tells
Lala Madan Lal that since he was born in 1946, he is eligible for citizenship
according to the Indian Citizenship Act.
In the
Al Kausar settlement of Hindu Pakistanis in Jodhpur, Tulsiram talks about the
problems in getting a visa from the Indian High Commission in Islamabad. From
Tharparkar district in Sindh, where most emigrants in the camp came from, it is
a seven-day journey to Islamabad, which not many can afford. "The minimum
cost for such a journey is Rs 30,000,'' says Tulsiram, who was a scribe in
Sindh. He calls it a policy of discouragement by the Indian ministries of home
and external affairs.
In
another camp amid the sandstone quarries on the outskirts of Jodhpur, Jamuna
Devi, 40, talks about lack of amenities at the camp. "When our children
fall ill, Government hospitals refuse to give us medicines, saying we are
Pakistanis,'' she says.
Rana
Ram, 32, personifies the problems on both sides of the border. He came to
Jodhpur in 2008 with his two children after his wife Samdha Ben was kidnapped,
raped and converted by religious fundamentalists in Rahim Yar Khan. "I
entreated them to return my wife. They just laughed,'' he says. In Jodhpur, the
community members got him married again so that his children could be looked
after. His second wife died of malaria within two months.
Since
they are not a votebank, only a handful of politicians have taken up the cause
of Pakistani Hindus and Sikhs. Avinash Rai Khanna, a BJP Rajya Sabha MP, keeps
raising questions about their plight in the Upper House. It was in reply to a
question raised by him on persecution of Hindus in Pakistan that Minister of
State (MoS) in mea E. Ahamed said on March 22: "The Government has taken
up the matter with the government of Pakistan. It has stated that it looked
after the welfare of all its citizens, particularly the minority community.'' A
secular India's mea accepts Pakistan's claims at face value. They claim that
since India does not endorse any religion, it cannot be seen as speaking for
Hindus in Pakistan.
Data
collected by India Today defies Pakistan's claim. More than 90 families
migrated to India in 2010, 145 in 2011 while 54 Hindu families have already
migrated to India since January 2012. Since 2010, as documents show, 24 Hindu
families migrated toNepal while 12 families chose to live in Sri Lanka after
fleeing Pakistan. In February itself, 30 Hindus comprising five families left
Thul, a small town in Jacobabad district, for India.
In reply
to another question by the MP on March 28, MoS in MHA M. Ramachandran said that
they had received 148 applications for citizenship of Pakistani Hindus from
Punjab state from 2009 to 2011. Only 16 applications were accepted for
citizenship; 119 are pending for want of documents and 13 were rejected.
Amid the
cold figures of rejection are the scars left on the psyche of refugees. Lala
Madan Lal, 66, of Khanna, recently read Toba Tek Singh, a short story by Saadat
Hasan Manto in Urdu, and can't stop talking about it. "Like Bishan Singh
in the story, we will all die in no man's land as people with no land to call
their own," he rues.
- With
Qaswar Abbas and Uday Mahurkar
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