Horrific Crime in Pakistan: 15-Year-Old Hindu Girl Abducted at Gunpoint, Humanity in Tatters

Horrific Crime in Pakistan: Badin District, Sindh Province, Pakistan — a quiet, rural area where the Hindu community has lived in fear for years.

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Published on: 3 July 2025 7:08 PM IST
Horrific Crime in Pakistan 15-Year-Old Hindu Girl Abducted at Gunpoint Humanity in Tatters
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Horrific Crime in Pakistan 15-Year-Old Hindu Girl Abducted at Gunpoint Humanity in Tatters

Horrific Crime in Pakistan: Badin District, Sindh Province, Pakistan — a quiet, rural area where the Hindu community has lived in fear for years. But what happened on the night of July 1 shattered even the last sliver of hope that remained. A 15-year-old innocent Hindu girl — who should have been in school, reading books — was abducted from her own home at gunpoint by four Muslim men. This wasn’t a scene from a film; it was a terrifying reality of Pakistan that the international community continues to ignore.

The news of the girl’s abduction — followed just hours later by her forced marriage — left the entire village of Matli and surrounding areas in shock. Though this is not the first such incident in this stronghold of Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the sheer brazenness of this act raises serious questions — not just about Pakistan’s legal system, but about its very humanity.

Guns Spoke, Humanity Remained Silent

According to a report by Dawn, the girl’s 45-year-old uncle, a simple rural man, filed a complaint with Pakistan’s Human Rights Commission. He stated that four armed men stormed into their house and abducted his 15-year-old niece. Just hours later, a nikahnama (marriage certificate) surfaced, allegedly stating that the girl had been married to a Muslim man.

But was this a marriage? Or a deliberate plot — to terrorize Hindu girls into conversion?

Human Rights Commission Reacts, Police Still “Asleep”

After the shocking incident, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan swiftly issued strict directives to the Sindh Police. The commission labeled the act a serious crime under sections 365-B (abduction), 364-A (forced marriage or conversion), and 506 (criminal intimidation) of the Pakistan Penal Code.

The Commission demanded immediate recovery of the girl and arrest of the culprits. So far, two accused — Mansoor Dar and Maqsood Dar — have been identified, but disturbingly, no arrests have been made yet.

The question arises: Who is pressuring the police into silence?

Has being Hindu in Sindh become a crime in itself?

Another ‘Nikah Jihad’? Pakistan’s Intentions Under Scrutiny

This isn’t the first time a Hindu girl has been abducted and forcibly married in Pakistan. In 2023, a similar incident occurred in Karachi where a minor Hindu girl was kidnapped and forcibly married. That incident sparked mass protests by the Hindu community, eventually forcing the government to intervene and rescue the girl.

But what happened afterward?

Did the Pakistani government take any concrete steps?

Is there genuine interest in protecting minorities, or is the state simply presenting a false image on international platforms?

Laws Exist – But Only on Paper

Pakistan recently passed a law prohibiting child marriage, with a punishment of up to 7 years in prison for offenders.

But what is the point of such laws when:

The victim is Hindu

The perpetrators are powerful

And the entire system stands mute?

Sindh is home to over 4 million Hindus, yet their condition is deteriorating day by day. According to Pakistani human rights groups, Hindus here live like bonded laborers — without a voice, without protection.

When Will the World Open Its Eyes?

Human rights organizations across the world, including in India, must raise their voices openly on this issue. This is not about just one girl — this is a battle for the very existence of an entire community.

When a 15-year-old girl is kidnapped at gunpoint and made a slave in the name of conversion and marriage, it is no longer a human rights violation — it is a mockery of humanity.

Why is the United Nations silent?

Why are international human rights bodies and the U.S. government silent?

Have the rights of minorities become reserved for just one religion?

This is Not Just Abduction – It’s an Attempt to Erase an Entire Community

To consider the Sindh incident as an isolated crime would be self-deception. This is part of a larger conspiracy — one that thrives on local complicity, political silence, and administrative inaction. That 15-year-old girl may never return home again, but her screams expose the rotting core of Pakistan’s system, where minority girls are nothing more than easy prey.

This is a test of humanity, justice, and international conscience. How many more cries will it take before the world listens?

Newstrack      Network

Newstrack Network

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