[Hindu leaders insist that Ms. Kumari was abducted at
gunpoint and forced to abandon her religion. Local Muslim leaders say she
wanted to marry her secret sweetheart: Naveed Shah, a young neighbor who said
he had been conducting a secret courtship with her via mobile phone and the
Internet for several months. Ms. Kumari, for her part, has said in a court
filing and media interviews that she converted of her free will — but public
figures have questioned whether she had been pressed or intimidated into saying
that. ]
By Declan Walsh
Sam Phelps for The New York Times
Men read from the Koran at a Muslim
shrine in the
Ghotki district of Pakistan, where
controversy has
emerged over a conversion.
|
GHOTKI, Pakistan
— Banditry is an old scourge in this impoverished district of southern
Pakistan, on the plains between the mighty river Indus and a sprawling desert,
where roving gangs rob and kidnap with abandon. Lately, though, local passions
have stirred with allegations of an unusual theft: that of a young woman’s
heart.
In the predawn darkness on Feb. 24, Rinkel Kumari, a
19-year-old student from a Hindu family, disappeared from her home in Mirpur
Mathelo, a small village off a busy highway in Sindh Province. Hours later, she
resurfaced 12 miles away, at the home of a prominent Muslim cleric who phoned
her parents with news that distressed them: Their daughter wished to convert to
Islam, he said.
Their protests were futile. By sunset, Ms. Kumari had become
a Muslim, married a young Muslim man, and changed her name to Faryal Bibi.
Over the past month, this conversion has generated an acrid
controversy that has reverberated far beyond its origins in small-town
Pakistan, whipping up a news media frenzy that has traced ugly sectarian
divisions and renewed a wider debate about the protection of vulnerable
minorities in a country that has so often failed them.
At its heart, though, it is a head-on clash of narratives
and motives.
Hindu leaders insist that Ms. Kumari was abducted at
gunpoint and forced to abandon her religion. Local Muslim leaders say she
wanted to marry her secret sweetheart: Naveed Shah, a young neighbor who said
he had been conducting a secret courtship with her via mobile phone and the
Internet for several months. Ms. Kumari, for her part, has said in a court
filing and media interviews that she converted of her free will — but public
figures have questioned whether she had been pressed or intimidated into saying
that.
The truth may emerge Monday, when the young woman is due to
testify before the Supreme Court in Islamabad. For the past two weeks she has
been sequestered in a women’s shelter in Karachi on court orders. When she
takes the stand on Monday, many Pakistanis hope she can resolve the central
mystery: where do her religious, and romantic, intentions lie?
In one sense, the drama is an old story in South Asia, where
the contours of society have been shaped by waves of conversions over the
centuries. Since the founding of Pakistan, most conversions are to Islam, the
state religion. But such conversions usually take place quietly, even in an
organized fashion, and the unusual furor surrounding the latest case stems
partly from the brash manner of her conversion at the hands of a divisive local
politician, Mian Mitho.
After Ms. Kumari declared herself a Muslim in her town court
on Feb. 27, Mr. Mitho triumphantly led the new convert from the courthouse,
parading her before thousands of cheering supporters. Then he drove her in a
caravan to an ancient Sufi religious shrine controlled by his family and famed
as a site where Hindus have been converted.
There, Ms. Kumari was welcomed by Mr. Mitho’s elderly
brother, Mian Shaman — the same cleric who had converted her three days earlier
— who led her into the towering shrine. When she emerged, now wearing a black
veil, gunmen unleashed volleys of celebratory Kalashnikov fire into the air and
shouted “God is calling you!”
Hindu leaders, enraged, viewed the images as a crass
provocation. “If the couple was really in love, then why this fanfare of guns?”
said Amarnath Motumal, a Hindu lawyer and human rights activist in Karachi. “It
clearly shows they are trying to embarrass the Hindu community and are bent on
taking our girls forcefully.”
Ms. Kumari’s parents pursued the case through the courts,
claiming that their daughter had been abducted by a Muslim supremacist, and
that the police and judiciary were biased against them because they came from a
minority background.
“Mian Mitho is a terrorist and a thug. He takes the girls,
and keeps them in his home for sexual purposes,” said Ms. Kumari’s father, Nand
Lal, a government schoolteacher, noting that Mr. Mitho’s armed guards had
escorted his daughter to court appearances and news conferences. His wife,
Sulachany Devi, issued an anguished appeal. “Rinkel was my blood, and she
remains my blood. All I want is for her to return home,” she said.
Mr. Mitho, in an interview, denied the allegations against
him. “I am merely protecting her human rights,” he said. And at the Sufi shrine
in Ghotki district, his brother, the cleric who converted Ms. Kumari, was
equally unapologetic.
“We are saving them from the fires of hell,” said Mian
Shaman, a frail man in his 70s with a mottled complexion and a wavering voice.
“We consider they are born again, and the sins of their previous life are
washed away.”
Mr. Shaman estimated he had converted 200 people the
previous year. He insisted none had been coerced. “Forced conversions are not
permitted in Islam,” he said firmly.
Mr. Shaman led the way into the mosque, a spectacular
building covered in intricately patterned indigo tiles and a carved wooden
roof. Then he walked into the adjacent shrine, where murmuring pilgrims rocked
back and forth in front of four tombs containing the bones of the cleric’s
ancestors.
Women are not permitted inside, he said — they may only peek
through a small barred window in the tomb wall — but he made an exception for
Ms. Kumari. “She was a special lady,” he said.
The case has caused division within the ruling Pakistan
Peoples Party, of which Mr. Mitho is a member. Earlier this month, President
Asif Ali Zardari privately intervened to have Ms. Kumari taken into protective
custody. Later, the president’s sister, Dr. Azra Fazal Pechuho, delivered an
impassioned speech to Parliament about the plight of the Hindu community.
“I have a lot of discomfort with this kind of behavior,”
said a senior party member from Sindh Province, speaking on condition of
anonymity because of the political delicacy of the matter. “The state is not
giving the Hindus an equal environment. So they are turning to a narrative of
forced conversion to fight back.”
Pir Muhammad Shah, the local police chief, agreed that Mr.
Mitho’s actions had aggravated the situation. “It teased the whole Hindu
community, and led them to believe the conversion had been done at gunpoint.”
Although Pakistan is blighted by sectarian bloodshed, rural
Sindh Province is a relative beacon of religious tolerance. The majority of the
country’s Hindus, estimated to number more than three million people, live
here, and they have a history of tranquil co-existence with Muslims. The two
communities share religious festivals, go into business together, and attend
one another’s weddings and funerals.
Yet it remains a delicate social balance. In many Sindhi
towns, wealthy Hindu traders have been targeted by kidnappers. Conversions, which
are freighted with notions of collective honor, can present a jarring social
fault line. Officials with the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan have spoken
of up to 20 forced conversions a month — and Hindu families fleeing for India —
but they admit that the research is thin.
As Ms. Kumari’s anticipated court date nears, it has revived
many old tensions. And while no one is expecting widespread violence in her
case, in some of its particulars it bears a remarkable resemblance to an
earlier conversion scandal — one in 1936, when a British magistrate returned a
Hindu girl to her parents after she had been converted. The result was an
11-year uprising by Muslim Pashtun tribesmen that at one point involved 40,000
British troops.
GRAFT A
THREAT TO CHINA'S RULING PARTY: WEN
REUTERS
BEIJING: China could face a threat to its power structure
unless it stamps out rampant corruption among officials, Premier Wen Jiabao was
quoted as saying today.
The latest statement from Wen, who has long pushed to eradicate corruption, underscores broader worry that, left unchecked, the problem could hurt the legitimacy of one-party rule. “Wen Jiabao stressed that the greatest danger facing the ruling party is corruption,” Wen was quoted as telling the State Council, or cabinet, in comments reported on the government website. “If this issue is not resolved, the nature of political power could change.”
Anger over corruption has prompted a raft of “mass incidents,” an official euphemism for protests, worrying officials defending one-party rule and overseeing a smooth transition of power to a younger generation of leaders.
Wen called on senior officials to disclose their personal details, including information on spouses and children. He said “the use of public funds to buy cigarettes, fine wines and gifts” should be prohibited and pledged to “strictly control the number of celebrations, seminars and forums”.
Wen has stood out among China’s leaders as the most vocal advocate of measured relaxation under party control. As he prepares to leave power, he has called more forcefully — though vaguely — for political reform.
He retires next year, along with President Hu Jintao, after a decade in power. During that time, China has grown to become the world’s second-biggest economy, but one plagued by corruption and a growing income gap. Critics say Hu and Wen have failed to pursue reform vigorously enough to underpin long-term growth and wealth creation.
Addressing reporters at this month’s annual meeting of parliament, the National People’s Congress, Wen warned that failure to act against graft and income disparity could rekindle the chaos of Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution.
The latest statement from Wen, who has long pushed to eradicate corruption, underscores broader worry that, left unchecked, the problem could hurt the legitimacy of one-party rule. “Wen Jiabao stressed that the greatest danger facing the ruling party is corruption,” Wen was quoted as telling the State Council, or cabinet, in comments reported on the government website. “If this issue is not resolved, the nature of political power could change.”
Anger over corruption has prompted a raft of “mass incidents,” an official euphemism for protests, worrying officials defending one-party rule and overseeing a smooth transition of power to a younger generation of leaders.
Wen called on senior officials to disclose their personal details, including information on spouses and children. He said “the use of public funds to buy cigarettes, fine wines and gifts” should be prohibited and pledged to “strictly control the number of celebrations, seminars and forums”.
Wen has stood out among China’s leaders as the most vocal advocate of measured relaxation under party control. As he prepares to leave power, he has called more forcefully — though vaguely — for political reform.
He retires next year, along with President Hu Jintao, after a decade in power. During that time, China has grown to become the world’s second-biggest economy, but one plagued by corruption and a growing income gap. Critics say Hu and Wen have failed to pursue reform vigorously enough to underpin long-term growth and wealth creation.
Addressing reporters at this month’s annual meeting of parliament, the National People’s Congress, Wen warned that failure to act against graft and income disparity could rekindle the chaos of Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution.