UN rights experts urges action on coerced religious conversions, child marriage in Pakistan

Anjali Sharma

GG News Bureau

UNITED NATION, 17th Jan. UN independent rights experts on Monday expressed alarm at a rise in abductions of girls as young as 13 in Pakistan, who are forced to marry and convert to Islam, according to a press statement issued in New York.

They appealed to the authorities to stop the alleged abuse, the experts warned that teenagers had been “kidnapped from their families, trafficked far from their homes (and) made to marry men sometimes twice their age”.

They cited reports suggested the involvement of religious authorities and the complicity of security forces and the justice system; although they also acknowledged that Pakistan had already made efforts to pass legislation prohibiting such illegal practices.

 “We urge the Government to take immediate steps to prevent and thoroughly investigate these acts objectively and in line with domestic legislation and international human rights commitments. Perpetrators must be held fully accountable,” the experts said.

The experts urged Pakistan to uphold the rights of women and children, in a statement.

They said that Pakistan’s courts had enabled the perpetrators by accepting “fraudulent evidence” from them, regarding the age of the victims and their willingness to marry and convert to Islam.

They noted that the courts had also sometimes “misused interpretations of religious law to justify victims remaining with their abusers”; the police had also failed victims’ families by refusing to register the abductions, or dismissing them as “love marriages”.

The rights experts said they were “very concerned” that marriages and conversions have taken place “under threat of violence to these girls and women or their families.”

“Abductors force their victims to sign documents which falsely attest to their being of legal age for marriage as well as marrying and converting of free will. These documents are cited by the police as evidence that no crime has occurred.”

They said it was imperative that all victims, regardless of religious background, are afforded access to justice and equal protection under the law.

“Pakistani authorities must adopt and enforce legislation prohibiting forced conversions, forced and child marriages, kidnapping, and trafficking, and abide by their international human rights commitments to combat slavery and human trafficking and uphold the rights of women and children,” they said.

The statement was endorsed from the Working Group on discrimination against women and girls are part of the Special Procedures of the Human Rights Council.

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