This year, however, Motiyani was unable to prepare.
On the afternoon of April 6, just two days before the ritual, men clad in security forces uniforms picked him up from a general store he ran under the pretext that he had been summoned by a local police Deputy Superintendent (DSP).
That was the last time his family and friends saw him.
A month and a half since the incident, police have been unable to trace the Hindu leader, while his abductors’ identity and affiliation remain unclear. Were they security personnel, militants or members of a kidnapping ring?
“We don’t know who these men were,” said Bela SHO Ataullah. “But we are sure it was not the police who took him away. The men took the DSP’s name but he was not in Bela at that time. I cannot really say where he is and who picked him up.”
Motiyani’s family went to the Bela police station an hour after he was picked up but were shocked to find that he was not there. According to his brother Lila Ram, when they telephoned Motiyani he replied he was mistaken about the DSP and said the men who took him claimed he was summoned by an army major. Motiyani’s phone has been switched off since.
The apparent kidnapping has sent shockwaves across the 500 Hindus families living in Bela. Mukhi Shaam Laal, a member of the committee which Motiyani belongs to, said the people are extremely frightened by the incident, which was the first of its kind in the area.
“No one knows why he was picked up and by whom,” said Shaam Laal.
For Balochistan’s Hindu community, the disappearance is the latest in a worrying trend. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) noted that up to 25 Hindus were kidnapped from different parts of Balochistan last year, only to be released after heavy ransoms were paid.
“A top security official recently stated that 78 gangs in the province were kidnapping people, including minorities,” Hussain said.
The community is frustrated that the authorities have been of little use. A patron of the Pakistan Hindu Council, Ramesh Kumar, said no one was cooperating. “Our only demand from the government is his immediate recovery, and protection for the Hindu community in Balochistan.”
Published in The Express Tribune, May 21st, 2012.
COMMENTS (7)
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"78 gangs in the province were kidnapping people" baloch people still have time, let the Army deal with these so called nationalists
I thank my grandfather that he migrated to India at the right time. I don't blame the people or the govt. of Pakistan for the plight of the hindus who are still in Pakistan just as I don't blame the weather when it's cold in winter or hot in summer. It's in the laws of nature that to survive, one has to be either strong or clever,That they (hindus in Pakistan) lack the strength to fight for their right can be excused but there is no excuse for being naive in believing that they will ever be treated just and fair.
@Khan:
Don't forget the 'Gujarat' card thrown by religious nationalist right-wing nuts to justify crimes against Pakistani Hindu minorities, marginalizing them as 'foreign', because of their deranged anti-India 'tit for tat' resentment narrative.
Maybe if he pandered to right wing DPC Deoband militants and took part in their xenophobic hate fest rallies as a prop piece, he would have had protection...of course he'd have to sell his rights (if any), principles and sanity further just for some relative peace in this extreme bigoted and prejudiced nation.
Even more deplorable is that these low life criminal scums may have local political or army officials' backing.
Can we stop the typical excuses that the government and "urban" Pakistanis make of "Well if we can't defend 'our own people' [the extremely rude viewpoint that implies that somehow Pakistani Hindus or any other minority group are not our own people], how can we defend minorities?" and just admit that our ideology and hatred for anyone who is not a Salafist/Wahabi has led Pakistan down the hell hole it is becoming?
Until we admit that our desire to be Saudi is what is ruining us, how will we fix the problem?
=(
The %age of minorities is shrinking at a rapid rate from over 15% to a mere 3% now. Will Islam become the Religion of Peace, Brotherhood and Love after all the minorites in the country are vanquished ?
to make the Pakistan a develop nation on this globe we have to respect the minorities.