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Muslims
who kidnapped and forcibly converted an 18-year-old
Christian woman to Islam severely beat her mother on two
occasions to discourage her from trying to recover her
daughter, lawyers said.
LAHORE, May. 07,
2010 (Compass Direct News) Muslims who kidnapped
and forcibly converted an 18-year-old Christian woman to
Islam severely beat her mother on two occasions to
discourage her from trying to recover her daughter,
lawyers said.
Muhammad Akhter and Muhammad Munir on April 25 broke
into the home of 50-year-old widow Fazeelat Bibi while
her sons were at work and beat her because they were
upset at her continuous demands that they return her
daughter Saira, Christian Lawyers Foundation (CLF)
leaders told Compass.
CLF President Khalid Gill said that neighbors' calls to
the police emergency number went unheeded as the men
beat her in Lahore's predominantly Muslim Bostaan
Colony.
On April 18 Muhammad Akhter and members of his family
had beaten her with clubs and ripped her clothes when
the widow, having received a tearful phone call from her
kidnapped daughter that day, went to their house to
argue for her release.
In Saira's telephone call to her mother, received at the
house of Muslim neighbor Musarat Bibi, who is a
constable, the young woman was crying as she said that
Munir and Akhter were spreading false rumors that she
had eloped with Munir, Fazeelat said. She said her
daughter told her how Munir, Akhter and Munir's sister
Billo Bibi had kidnapped her, stolen the jewelry of her
dowry, forced her to convert to Islam and were
pressuring her to marry Munir.
At the time she was kidnapped on March 10, Saira was
engaged to a young Christian man of Youhanabad, a large
Christian slum on the outskirts of Lahore, Fazeelat Bibi
said.
“Saira's brothers and I were very joyful because we were
about to fix her wedding date,” she said.
Previously the radical Muslim family lived next door to
the Christian family. On March 10 Munir, who is Akhter's
uncle, came to the Christian family's home and told
Saira that her mother was ill at her hospital workplace
and wanted to see her immediately, Fazeelat Bibi said.
“Then Muhammad Munir deceitfully abducted Saira,” she
said. “It seemed as if Saira had vanished into thin air.
At first my three sons and I sons searched for Saira,
but our efforts were futile.”
She accused Munir, Akhter and Munir's sister Billo Bibi
of kidnapping her daughter. They have continued to
threaten to kill her if she persists in trying to
recover her daughter, she said. Her daughter, she added,
has called her “persistently” from Charrar village
saying that she has been kidnapped, forced to convert to
Islam and is being pressured to marry Munir against her
will.
“This also reveals that Saira has not tied the knot with
Munir yet,” Gill told Compass.
The distraught mother said she approached Kotlakhpat
Police Station Inspector Rana Shafiq seeking help to
recover her daughter, but that he flatly refused. The
inspector told her the issue could be resolved at the
local Bostaan Colony meeting, she said; the rulings of
such a meeting of local elders, known as a Punchayat,
have the equivalent of court authority in Pakistan.
Fazeelat Bibi said that several such meetings produced
no resolution to her daughter's kidnapping, but that
while present she heard the false rumor that her
daughter had wed Munir. At the meetings she also learned
that the Muslim men were keeping Saira at Charrar
village outside Lahore.
Fazeelat Bibi told Gill and CLF Secretary Azhar Kaleem
said that she was somewhat satisfied to learn at the
meetings that her daughter was at least safe, but her
relief vanished after the April 18 call from Saira. Her
daughter told her that she had tried to escape three
times, she said.
Once again the frail, 50-year-old woman sought the help
of Inspector Shafiq, and again he refused to help, the
CLF leaders said. Gill and Kaleem said that Shafiq was
explicitly inclined to favor his fellow Muslims in the
case, and that he told her to move to a Christian slum
as no one would help her in Bostaan Colony.
Gill, who is also head of the All Pakistan Minorities
Alliance in Punjab Province, and CLF Secretary Kaleem
said they believe that Akhter, Munir and Billo Bibi had
heavily bribed the inspector to keep him from
prosecuting the Muslims.
Shafiq declined to respond to Compass calls, and the
registrar of the Kotlakhpat police station, Abdul Qayyum,
said Shafiq was not available for comment.
Saira was just 2 months old when her father, Pervaiz
Masih, died and her mother and three brothers moved from
their native Yansonabad village to Lahore in search of a
better life, Fazeelat Bibi said. She said that she began
working as a sanitary worker at a hospital in order to
support them, while her sons began working as
day-laborers when they reached their teenage years.
Saira is her only daughter, Fazeelat Bibi said.
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