Atlas Shrugs
 
 
Monday, April 23, 2012
 
Pakistan: Muslims kidnap non-Muslim teens as  wives, girls forced to 
convert to Islam: 'For God's sake, take me away from that  hell.'"
 
 
Pig flying moment. This is, in of all places, The LA Times. That's how bad 
it  has gotten: the enemedia is finally covering the kidnapping and forced  
conversion of hundreds  of thousands of teens by religion of peaceniks. 
State-sanctioned  slavery. 
Is this so different as the Muslim gangs in the UK that ply young girls 
with  drugs and  alcohol and forcibly coerce them into prostitution? It's the  
supremacist ideology. That, of course, is never mentioned, covered or 
analyzed  in the enemedia. Also, the monstrous death of over 80 million Hindus 
in 
jihad  wars, land appropriations, cultural annihilations and enslavements 
has been  whitewashed from media accounts and history books. Cultural sanction 
of  genocide. 
_Hindus in Pakistan accuse Muslims of  kidnapping teens as wives_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-pakistan-hindu-conversions-201204
23,0,4186272.story)   
LA Times, April 22, 2012



The girls are forced to convert to Islam, rights groups  say.

JACOBABAD, _Pakistan_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/intl/pakistan-PLGEO00000020.topic)   — Rachna 
Kumari, 16, was shopping for dresses in this city's 
dust-choked  bazaar when it happened.

The man who her family says abducted  her was not a street thug. He was a 
police officer.

Nor was he a  stranger. Rachna's family knew and trusted him. He guarded 
the Hindu temple  run by her father, an important duty in a society where 
Hindus are often  terrorized by Muslim extremists, and he had helped Rachna 
cram 
for her  ninth-grade final exams.

After she disappeared from the market, he did  not demand a ransom. 
According to her family, he had an entirely different  purpose: to force her to 
convert to Islam and marry him.

In a country  where Hindu-dominated India is widely reviled as Enemy No. 1, 
Pakistan's Hindu  community endures extortion, disenfranchisement and other 
forms of  discrimination.

These days, however, Hindus are fixated on a surge of  kidnappings of 
teenage girls by young Muslim men who force them to convert and  wed. Pakistani 
human rights activists report as many as 25 cases a  month.

Most occur in the northern districts of Sindh province, on the  border with 
India and home to most of Pakistan's 2.5 million Hindus. The Hindu  
community is shrinking as families flee the area, which is run largely by  
Muslim 
feudal chiefs who own vast tracts of farmland and wield wide influence  over 
politics, law enforcement and the courts.

Hindus say the forcible  conversions follow the same script: The victim, 
abducted by a young man  related to or working for a feudal boss, is taken to 
a mosque where clerics,  along with the prospective groom's family, threaten 
to harm her and her  relatives if she resists.

Almost always, the girl complies, and not  long afterward, she is brought 
to a local court, where a judge, usually a  Muslim, rubber-stamps the 
conversion and marriage, according to Hindu  community members who have 
attended 
such hearings.

Often the young  Muslim man is accompanied by backers armed with rifles. 
Few members of the  girl's family are allowed to appear, and the victim, 
seeing no way out, signs  papers affirming her conversion and marriage.

"In court, usually it's  just four or five members of the girl's family 
against hundreds of armed  people for the boy," says B.H. Khurana, a doctor in 
Jacobabad and a Hindu  community leader. "In such a situation when we are 
unarmed and outnumbered,  how can we fight our case in court?"

Prominent Pakistani Muslims have  joined Hindu leaders in calling attention 
to the problem.
President _Asif  Ali Zardari_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics/asif-ali-zardari-PEPLT007501.topic) 's 
sister, lawmaker Azra Fazal Pechuho, told 
parliament last  month that a growing number of Hindu girls are being 
abducted and held at  madrasas, or Islamic religious schools, where they are 
forcibly  converted. She and other lawmakers have called for legislation to 
prohibit the  practice.

The issue was thrust into the spotlight by the case of Rinkle  Kumari, a 
17-year-old Hindu girl from the town of Mirpur Mathelo in the  southern 
province of Sindh. The case was one of three that recently went  before 
Pakistan's 
Supreme Court.

Kumari's parents, who are not related  to Rachna's family, allege that five 
men broke into their house in late  February, subdued Rinkle with a 
chloroform-soaked cloth and took her away. The  parents say the girl was forced 
to 
convert to Islam and marry Naveed Shah, a  neighbor.

Shah contends Rinkle acted willingly.

"She was not  forced at all," said Shah's lawyer, Malik Qamar Afzal. "She 
embraced Islam  freely, and afterward agreed to marry."

The day after the alleged  abduction and conversion, Rinkle was allowed to 
meet with her mother at a  district court.

"She told me, 'I have been kidnapped and I want to go  with you,'" recalled 
her mother, Sulchani Kumari. "She was sobbing as she told  me, 'For God's 
sake, take me away from that  hell.'"



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