implementation and sensitisation among the quarters concerned.
Chela Ram of the Pakistan Hindu Council said that the Sindh government had set up a minorities committee but it seldom met, and even its members did not know about its status. He hailed the announcement of Balochistan chief minister for streamlining implementation on five percent job quota in jobs.
Rubina Brohi, a member of the Sindh Human Rights Commission (SHRC), said it was correct that the provincial minorities committee was inactive. However, she said, the SHRC has prepared a draft bill against forced conversion and will it will be presented in the Sindh Assembly after the budget session. She said under the act, conversion of anyone under 18 years of age would be illegal.
A seasoned journalist, Amar Guriro, believed that the media was not honest in portraying the genuine issues of minority communities. “No credible data is available for forced conversions in Pakistan,” he said. “No one talks about the problems of scheduled caste people. Pakistan media does not report on the burning of holy book of Sikhs by Hindus in Sindh.”
Guriro said he had conducted a survey according to which 86 percent coverage of television channels was dedicated to only three subjects: politics, court and crime. According to him, more than 4,000 people had lost their lives in Karachi on account of the harsh heat but only a small percentage of it was being reported on the media.
He said there used to be 418 temples in Karachi but now only 60 had been left. He said the Sindh government was not spending any funds on development of any district where Hindus were in majority. “They are developing Thar only because it has copious coal reserves,” he said.
Dr Jaffar Ahmed, the director of Pakistan Study Centre at Karachi University, highlighted the need for chalking out a road map for the implementation of the ‘landmark’ SC verdict.
Dr Sono Khangharani, the chief executive of the Hisar Foundation, said most minority parliamentarians were nominated by political parties, so their loyalties lay with the organisation which provides them with a political office and not the people.
The chief of PILER, Karamat Ali, said armed forces were a challenge to democratic forces in Pakistan. “Democratic forces losing leverage because the scale of balance between civil and military forces is now heavily tipped in favour of the military,” he said. “There is a need to redouble our efforts for reclaiming our space. For it we must leave behind jingoism and muscle power play, and opt for a more rational approach.”