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Pakistan, India in war of words over issue of Hindu girls.

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Pakistan and India were in war of words on the issue of alleged abduction of Hindu girls and their alleged forced conversion to Islam in Sindh.
Minister for Information Fawad Chaudhry, responding to Indian External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, said Prime Minister Imran Khan’s ‘Naya Pakistan’ was not Modi’s India, after she sought details from the Indian envoy in Pakistan on the reported abduction and forced conversion of two Hindu teenage girls in Sindh.

“Mam its Pakistan’s internal issue and rest assured it’s not Modi’s India where minorities are subjugated, it is Imran Khan’s Naya Pak where white color of our flag is equally dearer to us,” Chaudhry replied to Swaraj’s tweet, in which she said she had asked the Indian high commissioner in Pakistan to send a report on alleged kidnapping and underage marriages.


“I hope you’ll act with same diligence when it comes to rights of Indian minorities,” the minister added in his rejoinder to the Indian external affairs minister. The minister urged Sushma Swaraj to stand up for minorities in India. Fawad maintained he was happy that in the Indian administration, there were people who cared for minority rights in other countries, “but we hope that their conscience will allow them to stand up for minorities at home as well.”


He emphasised Gujarat and Jammu must weigh heavily on the soul of the Indian external affairs minister. He asserted that minorities in Pakistan enjoyed equal rights, and the two Hindu girls issue was an internal matter of Pakistan.

Prime Minister Imran Khan has taken notice of the matter and directed Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar to immediately investigate the matter of reported abduction of two Hindu girls from Sindh and their shifting to Rahim Yar Khan.

Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry said this in a tweet. The minister noted that if the reports were true, the prime minister had asked for early recovery of the abducted girls. Fawad said the PM had also directed Sindh and Punjab governments to devise a common strategy about the matter and take concrete steps to prevent such incidents in future.

Fawad Chaudhry had also tweeted on Saturday that the government had taken notice of reports of the alleged forced conversion and underage marriages of the two girls in Ghotki. His statement came in response to former Indian Supreme Court judge Markandey Katju, who had called out Prime Minister Imran Khan on social media.

"Sir! Notice has already been taken and Ministry of Human Rights has been asked for an inquiry ll update asap, rest assure its Naya Pakistan we’ll not allow it to become Modi’s India where rights of minorities have become a joke," Fawad Chaudhry had replied.

Meanwhile, according to media reports, India has sent an official note to the Pakistan Foreign Office.

According to Indian media sources, the note was sent on Sunday asking for suitable remedial action be taken by Pakistan government to protect and promote safety, security and welfare of its own citizens, especially the minority communities.Meanwhile, the two Hindu girls, who were allegedly abducted and forcefully converted to Islam, approached a court in Bahawalpur seeking protection.

According to the family of the teenage girls, the sisters were abducted from Daharki in Ghotki district of Sindh, and forcefully converted to Islam before they were subjected to underage marriages. The incident came to light after the girls’ father and brother revealed the details in videos that went viral on social media.


In a separate video, however, the girls can be seen saying that they accepted Islam under their own free will. Earlier today, the teenagers in question approached a court in Bahawalpur seeking protection, in a baffling twist of events that appears to contradict the family’s claims that they were abducted and converted to Islam and wedded off under duress.

Police have meanwhile arrested a man from Khanpur who is suspected to have assisted in the nikah of the girls. Meanwhile, Punjab Governor Chaudhry Muhammad Sarwar said in a message on Twitter that the government is strictly against forced conversions. He said the government will make sure that these incident didn’t happen, however, India should refrain from meddling in Pakistan’s internal matters.
 
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Stop poking your filthy noses in our internal affairs ..... or else we have plenty of Babri mosques, golden temples and Churches ......... to tell our High Commissioner to visit to and send us a report. Cow ka katta is separate issue we will start watching closely.
 
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Typical. First talk big than back track.

They were going crazy with war hysteria than after loosing two jets and a heli on 27th, same Sushma said, we wan't to de-escalate.

Panga nahi liya karo na phir.
 
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Good Lord all high offices of Pakistan get involved to find out the alleged culprits on the basis of a fake news:pakistan:



Now compare it with hindutava East Indian union , more than 2000 Muslims get killed in 3 days and no one gave a flying hoot. Rather the state machinery threatened the independent journalist asking questions to send them to Pakistan :o:


The Indians, while engaging Pakistan, should remember that you ain't dealing with navaz shareef or zardari

There's a new sheriff in the town
 
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448267_303342_fawadindia_akhbar.jpg

Pakistan and India were in war of words on the issue of alleged abduction of Hindu girls and their alleged forced conversion to Islam in Sindh.
Minister for Information Fawad Chaudhry, responding to Indian External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, said Prime Minister Imran Khan’s ‘Naya Pakistan’ was not Modi’s India, after she sought details from the Indian envoy in Pakistan on the reported abduction and forced conversion of two Hindu teenage girls in Sindh.

“Mam its Pakistan’s internal issue and rest assured it’s not Modi’s India where minorities are subjugated, it is Imran Khan’s Naya Pak where white color of our flag is equally dearer to us,” Chaudhry replied to Swaraj’s tweet, in which she said she had asked the Indian high commissioner in Pakistan to send a report on alleged kidnapping and underage marriages.


“I hope you’ll act with same diligence when it comes to rights of Indian minorities,” the minister added in his rejoinder to the Indian external affairs minister. The minister urged Sushma Swaraj to stand up for minorities in India. Fawad maintained he was happy that in the Indian administration, there were people who cared for minority rights in other countries, “but we hope that their conscience will allow them to stand up for minorities at home as well.”


He emphasised Gujarat and Jammu must weigh heavily on the soul of the Indian external affairs minister. He asserted that minorities in Pakistan enjoyed equal rights, and the two Hindu girls issue was an internal matter of Pakistan.

Prime Minister Imran Khan has taken notice of the matter and directed Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar to immediately investigate the matter of reported abduction of two Hindu girls from Sindh and their shifting to Rahim Yar Khan.

Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry said this in a tweet. The minister noted that if the reports were true, the prime minister had asked for early recovery of the abducted girls. Fawad said the PM had also directed Sindh and Punjab governments to devise a common strategy about the matter and take concrete steps to prevent such incidents in future.

Fawad Chaudhry had also tweeted on Saturday that the government had taken notice of reports of the alleged forced conversion and underage marriages of the two girls in Ghotki. His statement came in response to former Indian Supreme Court judge Markandey Katju, who had called out Prime Minister Imran Khan on social media.

"Sir! Notice has already been taken and Ministry of Human Rights has been asked for an inquiry ll update asap, rest assure its Naya Pakistan we’ll not allow it to become Modi’s India where rights of minorities have become a joke," Fawad Chaudhry had replied.

Meanwhile, according to media reports, India has sent an official note to the Pakistan Foreign Office.

According to Indian media sources, the note was sent on Sunday asking for suitable remedial action be taken by Pakistan government to protect and promote safety, security and welfare of its own citizens, especially the minority communities.Meanwhile, the two Hindu girls, who were allegedly abducted and forcefully converted to Islam, approached a court in Bahawalpur seeking protection.

According to the family of the teenage girls, the sisters were abducted from Daharki in Ghotki district of Sindh, and forcefully converted to Islam before they were subjected to underage marriages. The incident came to light after the girls’ father and brother revealed the details in videos that went viral on social media.


In a separate video, however, the girls can be seen saying that they accepted Islam under their own free will. Earlier today, the teenagers in question approached a court in Bahawalpur seeking protection, in a baffling twist of events that appears to contradict the family’s claims that they were abducted and converted to Islam and wedded off under duress.

Police have meanwhile arrested a man from Khanpur who is suspected to have assisted in the nikah of the girls. Meanwhile, Punjab Governor Chaudhry Muhammad Sarwar said in a message on Twitter that the government is strictly against forced conversions. He said the government will make sure that these incident didn’t happen, however, India should refrain from meddling in Pakistan’s internal matters.
Hindu girls runaway from their homes on their own will. I am from Sindh, and I have seen and observed Hindu girls most of the time more than willing to runaway from their families.
The main cause is the treatment in Hindu homes with these girls.
Most of the times, girls know that their father will not be able to fulfil the requirements of groom, so they choose a better path, and simply do a nikah with some Muslim boy after conversion.
So basically it's the problem with Hindu beliefs, and how Hindus use it.
Hindu girls save their families a great trouble in the hands of fellow Hindus.
 
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Hindu girls runaway from their homes on their own will. I am from Sindh, and I have seen and observed Hindu girls most of the time more than willing to runaway from their families.
The main cause is the treatment in Hindu homes with these girls.
Most of the times, girls know that their father will not be able to fulfil the requirements of groom, so they choose a better path, and simply do a nikah with some Muslim boy after conversion.
So basically it's the problem with Hindu beliefs, and how Hindus use it.
Hindu girls save their families a great trouble in the hands of fellow Hindus.

And they approached the district judge asking for protection. Having said that we can use this incident to malign peoples party as a large part of it is made up of sindhi feudals.
 
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And they approached the district judge asking for protection. Having said that we can use this incident to malign peoples party as a large part of it is made up of sindhi feudals.
So body mentions the real problem, that is with hindu marriage system.
And in Sindh this runaway thing is very Common. Many Sindhi Muslim girls also run away with xyz.
Why aren't we talking about recent haryana incident in UN?
 
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