Islamic Republic of Pakistan : News, Discussions & Updates

it was a typing mistake. at least you remember babur.don't forget his name.

Yes no one forgets . Least of all descendants who were raped and converted . They celebrate the rape and genocides against their own ancestor aa hero.

It's shame the descendants of turks , mongols and Arabs but not Indians could not win agaist british. And in 21 century have come to become slaves of chinese .
 
it was a typing mistake. at least you remember babur.don't forget his name.
yeah u need to remember he is a uzbek not a pakistani. It does not matter which religion u follow but atleast have some dignity instead of blindly hero worshiping looters & rapists of ur ancestors/lands. Raping & looting of muslims by muslims is still a rape & loot and if ur proud of it . it simply shows ur character.
 
Pakistan’s forced conversions shame Imran Khan
The parents of Suntara Kohli, Bhagwanti Kohli, Aisha Megwad and Priyanka Kumari continue their protests against the abductions and forced conversions of their daughters. The four Hindu girls were among seven cases of forced conversion in Pakistan reported by local newspapers last week alone. Suntara, Bhagwanti and Aisha are still teenagers; the former only 15. But their stories are far from exceptional here.
At least 1,000 non-Muslim girls are forcibly converted to Islam in the country annually, according to a Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) report. Many of these girls belong to the Hindu community in Sindh, where most of Pakistan’s eight million Hindus live. Locals claim that such abductions are so common they affect 'every other family', with a vast majority of those targeted underage. Some victims are as young as 12 years old.
And yet where is the law dedicated to curtailing the relentless spree of forced conversions? Two such bills, tabled in 2016 and then 2019, were shot down. Among other clauses, the bills demanded that the minimum age for changing one’s religion be set to 18 years, jail terms be sanctioned for anyone guilty of coercion, and a 21-day period in a safe house be mandated for the person seeking conversion to ensure that the decision has been taken out of free will.
Turning down the first bill against forced conversion, former Sindh governor Saeeduzzaman Siddiqui, said: 'When Hazrat Ali [the fourth caliph in Sunni sect, and the first imam for the Shia] can convert to Islam at a young age [9 years], why can’t Hindu girls?'
Laws barring forced conversions have been deemed ‘un-Islamic’ by some for trying to set an age limit for embracing Islam. A similar Islamist resistance has long been held against attempts to eradicate child marriage in Pakistan, with the Council of Islamic Ideology citing Prophet Muhammad’s marriage to six-year-old Aisha, as narrated in hadiths (compilations of the prophet’s sayings). Even though Pakistan managed to finally pass legislation against child marriage last year, courts continue to allow forced conversion and marriage of underage girls in blatant defiance of the law. This is especially true in Sindh where the Child Marriages Restraint Act has been in place since 2013.
Yet these widespread failures of law and enforcement are in stark contrast to the state’s unflinching position on individuals willingly wanting to leave Islam. The registration policy of Pakistan’s National Database and Registration Authority, under the ‘Religion Change’ clause notes: 'Once declaration/undertaking of being Muslim has been made… modification in Religion from Islam… shall not be allowed.'
The clause is in line with Pakistan’s Islamist hudood laws, which carry barbaric punishments such as stoning to death, with the penal code upholding capital punishment for offences against Islam. Pakistan is one of 13 states that sanction death for blaspheming against Islam.
While the death penalty isn’t explicitly mandated for apostasy in the Pakistan Penal Code, it is interpreted as a capital crime, not only by the traditional fiqh but also by many modern day Islamic jurists, including Pakistan’s Council of Islamic Ideology – a constitutionally mandated body tasked with ensuring that all legislations comply with the Quran and Sunnah [life of Prophet Muhammad].
As a result, Pakistani atheists live under the sword of death given that many have been lynched and imprisoned over unsubstantiated allegations of blasphemy. The menace has increased since 2017, when the state initiated a full-fledged crackdown on atheism: secular bloggers were abducted, the government ran ads urging people to identify blasphemers among them, as the highest judges declared them ‘terrorists’.
Presiding over this grim situation is Imran Khan, who has spent much of his energy extricating ‘Islamophobia’ around the world. He would be well advised to note that Pakistan’s treatment of dissenting Muslim voices and the ‘wrong kind of Muslims’ is arguably more ‘Islamophobic’ than many of the countries he accuses of the same.
Indeed his backers, the all-powerful Pakistan Army, have had a leading role in the country’s Islamisation. Khan’s political opponents have similarly been complicit, with even the self-proclaimed liberal Pakistan People’s Party doing little to distance itself from individuals orchestrating forced conversions in Sindh.
In Pakistan, there’s a criminal dearth of realisation in the corridors of power regarding the gaping hollowness of the state’s condemnation of human rights violation, lack of religious freedom or suppression of minorities in other countries. Under Khan, Pakistan’s persecuted communities are running out of hope for salvation.
Pakistan’s forced conversions shame Imran Khan
The parents of Suntara Kohli, Bhagwanti Kohli, Aisha Megwad and Priyanka Kumari continue their protests against the abductions and forced conversions of their daughters. The four Hindu girls were among seven cases of forced conversion in Pakistan reported by local newspapers last week alone. Suntara, Bhagwanti and Aisha are still teenagers; the former only 15. But their stories are far from exceptional here.
At least 1,000 non-Muslim girls are forcibly converted to Islam in the country annually, according to a Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) report. Many of these girls belong to the Hindu community in Sindh, where most of Pakistan’s eight million Hindus live. Locals claim that such abductions are so common they affect 'every other family', with a vast majority of those targeted underage. Some victims are as young as 12 years old.
And yet where is the law dedicated to curtailing the relentless spree of forced conversions? Two such bills, tabled in 2016 and then 2019, were shot down. Among other clauses, the bills demanded that the minimum age for changing one’s religion be set to 18 years, jail terms be sanctioned for anyone guilty of coercion, and a 21-day period in a safe house be mandated for the person seeking conversion to ensure that the decision has been taken out of free will.
Turning down the first bill against forced conversion, former Sindh governor Saeeduzzaman Siddiqui, said: 'When Hazrat Ali [the fourth caliph in Sunni sect, and the first imam for the Shia] can convert to Islam at a young age [9 years], why can’t Hindu girls?'
Laws barring forced conversions have been deemed ‘un-Islamic’ by some for trying to set an age limit for embracing Islam. A similar Islamist resistance has long been held against attempts to eradicate child marriage in Pakistan, with the Council of Islamic Ideology citing Prophet Muhammad’s marriage to six-year-old Aisha, as narrated in hadiths (compilations of the prophet’s sayings). Even though Pakistan managed to finally pass legislation against child marriage last year, courts continue to allow forced conversion and marriage of underage girls in blatant defiance of the law. This is especially true in Sindh where the Child Marriages Restraint Act has been in place since 2013.
Yet these widespread failures of law and enforcement are in stark contrast to the state’s unflinching position on individuals willingly wanting to leave Islam. The registration policy of Pakistan’s National Database and Registration Authority, under the ‘Religion Change’ clause notes: 'Once declaration/undertaking of being Muslim has been made… modification in Religion from Islam… shall not be allowed.'
The clause is in line with Pakistan’s Islamist hudood laws, which carry barbaric punishments such as stoning to death, with the penal code upholding capital punishment for offences against Islam. Pakistan is one of 13 states that sanction death for blaspheming against Islam.
While the death penalty isn’t explicitly mandated for apostasy in the Pakistan Penal Code, it is interpreted as a capital crime, not only by the traditional fiqh but also by many modern day Islamic jurists, including Pakistan’s Council of Islamic Ideology – a constitutionally mandated body tasked with ensuring that all legislations comply with the Quran and Sunnah [life of Prophet Muhammad].
As a result, Pakistani atheists live under the sword of death given that many have been lynched and imprisoned over unsubstantiated allegations of blasphemy. The menace has increased since 2017, when the state initiated a full-fledged crackdown on atheism: secular bloggers were abducted, the government ran ads urging people to identify blasphemers among them, as the highest judges declared them ‘terrorists’.
Presiding over this grim situation is Imran Khan, who has spent much of his energy extricating ‘Islamophobia’ around the world. He would be well advised to note that Pakistan’s treatment of dissenting Muslim voices and the ‘wrong kind of Muslims’ is arguably more ‘Islamophobic’ than many of the countries he accuses of the same.
Indeed his backers, the all-powerful Pakistan Army, have had a leading role in the country’s Islamisation. Khan’s political opponents have similarly been complicit, with even the self-proclaimed liberal Pakistan People’s Party doing little to distance itself from individuals orchestrating forced conversions in Sindh.
In Pakistan, there’s a criminal dearth of realisation in the corridors of power regarding the gaping hollowness of the state’s condemnation of human rights violation, lack of religious freedom or suppression of minorities in other countries. Under Khan, Pakistan’s persecuted communities are running out of hope for salvation.
 
Why It should shame IKN, the “Riyaasat e Madina” eulogiser ?. In REM everyone was forced to convert or killed. It’s actually step in the direction of REM.
Anyway it’s a month old news
 
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LoL at MoFa. Pakistanis are very ingenious at acronyms. Anyone remember RANDI ?
:unsure:
@safriz @Arsalan123
Common you could have literally anything but you people chose this ?

Leaving aside Pakistan, this pic has caused huge ruckus in Indian left-liberals and Secular lot. Sambit patra twitter timeline looks like a Nuke went off there. This story was prime time in major news channels debate yesterday. Whole lobby was engaged to suppress this news and spin it against Indian forces.

The whole coordination and synchronization is mind boggling.

 
Leaving aside Pakistan, this pic has caused huge ruckus in Indian left-liberals and Secular lot. Sambit patra twitter timeline looks like a Nuke went off there. This story was prime time in major news channels debate yesterday. Whole lobby was engaged to suppress this news and spin it against Indian forces.

The whole coordination and synchronization is mind boggling.

Good thing Patra stuck to his guns. He had mom & son - Tavleen & Atish frothing at their mouths.
 
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Good thing Patra stuck to his guns. He had mom & son - Tavleen & Atish frothing at their mouths.

Even today it's hot prime time debate

Only question is if a country's armed forces are capable of killing a random Kashmiri traveling in his car, then rescue his grandkid, and let his family, including kid loose to blame Indian army while jihadi journalists froth from mouth under guise of free speech, isn't this proves hypocrisy in some way?

I mean which fascist regime will kill an innocent peaceful and then let hordes loose on own news channels and social media sites criticizing govt in power?

Stark contrast in freedom and laws within a country, seems like another Salwar story of hoors and jinns.

That's the reason why cousin marriage should be discouraged, otherwise settle for goat's IQ.
 
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Tweet :- Malaysia suspends Pakistani pilots after license fraud relevation.

This fake pilot thing is blowing up in world news, my own theory is that Pakistani government chose the time to reveal this news to subdue any opposition to privatisation of PIA, well played, hope the families of these pilots have alternate means of income.
 

Tweet :- Malaysia suspends Pakistani pilots after license fraud relevation.

This fake pilot thing is blowing up in world news, my own theory is that Pakistani government chose the time to reveal this news to subdue any opposition to privatisation of PIA, well played, hope the families of these pilots have alternate means of income.
Privatization of PIA? Look at what's happening around man. Every airline worth it's salt is up the creek without a paddle. Same is true of aircraft manufacturers. Privatisation of AI didn't evince much interest even before the pandemic. Who in their right minds would even contemplate taking over PIA. It's going to be shut down. That's the only way out.
 
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