One of more consequential aspects of the Bill, even greater than the registration of Hindu marriages, is the goal to end abductions of married Hindu women and their forced conversions. Registration of marriage and divorce is an ordinary matter of the state, but the blatant violation of human rights in the way of abductions and forced marriages is sordid and needs to end at all costs. Nonchalant attitudes towards violations that rob citizens of their free will cannot continue while our leaders continue attending UN general assemblies year after year, because a basic tenet of UN membership is to protect the rights of all people. The passage of the Bill is timely with the recent attendance by our PM at the UN General Assembly. This time should also serve to allow our lawmakers to review other laws that deliberately seek to sideline minority and other smaller communities of Pakistan: the Ahmadis, the Christians, and the Zoroastrians among some of them. We will not see a denouement to the persecution of precious Pakistani communities until lawmakers and law enforcement not only openly denounce violations but end the systemic marginalisation through protective laws and their implementation, as this Bill hopefully seeks to do.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 3rd, 2016.
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