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Hindu boy converts to Islam on live TV show in Pakistan

Rezaul H Laskar, PTI
Islamabad, 27 Jul - A young Hindu boy converted to Islam on a live television show hosted by a controversial Pakistani anchor, triggering outrage among liberals and sparking concerns among minority communities.

The Hindu youth, who appeared to be a teenager and was identified only as Sunil, was converted by Maulana Mufti Muhammad Aqmal on a special live Ramzan show on ARY Digital channel that is hosted by Maya Khan. During the show beamed on Tuesday, Sunil sat among a group of children and men and said he had decided to convert to Islam while working for the NGO headed by rights activist Ansar Burney.

“Two years ago, I observed the fast during Ramzan. There is no pressure on me to accept Islam, I want to accept Islam of my own will,” he said in response to questions from Aqmal.

The cleric then asked Sunil to say he was “accepting Islam without any pressure and without being forced by anyone” and to recite the Kalimah Tayyibah.

Following the conversion, Maya Khan announced that Sunil would be renamed Muhammad Abdullah.

Khan, who was sacked by Samaa TV channel earlier this year after she earned the ire of people across Pakistan when she accosted “immoral” couples dating in Karachi’s parks, said she hoped Sunil “would become a good Muslim”.

Hindu leaders expressed concern at the development, saying it could increase pressure on the minority community.

“This has caused sadness in our community as it does not set a good example. Such shows will increase pressure on our community,” said Amarnath Randhawa of the Lahore-based Hindu Sudhar Sabha.

“Minority communities are already oppressed in Pakistan and the pressure is bound to increase on people when such things are played up in the media,” Randhawa said.

Sarim Burney, the brother of Ansar Burney, was part of the show and sat beside Sunil as he was converted.

The show was widely discussed on social media websites and some commentators said it marked a new low in the race for eyeballs and advertising among TV anchors who are hosting special shows during Ramzan.

In an editorial titled “Religion for ratings”, the Dawn newspaper said it had become apparent that the “electronic media will go to extreme lengths to spice things up” and even religion was “now fair game too”.

“In yet another example of how the industry’s commercial goals trump ethics, open-mindedness and common sense, on Tuesday a television show broadcast an imam leading a Hindu boy through a live conversion to Islam... Complete with the audience joining in to suggest Muslim names for the new convert,” the editorial said.

“More disturbingly, what the channel obviously didn’t stop to consider is the message this broadcast would send to the country’s minorities. The joy with which the conversion was greeted, and the congratulations that followed, sent a clear signal that other religions don’t enjoy the same status in Pakistan as Islam does. In a country where minorities are already treated as second-class citizens in many ways, this served to marginalise them even further,” the daily said.

Syrian rebel forces were bracing on Friday for the “mother of all battles” in Aleppo, as the former UN observer mission chief said President Bashar al-Assad’s fall was a matter of time.

Waves of troop reinforcements have been pouring into the northern city — Syria’s second largest — and a Government security official said the offensive feared by the rebels could come as early as Friday.

“The special forces were deployed on Wednesday and Thursday on the edges of the city, and more troops have arrived to take part in a generalised counter-offensive on Friday or Saturday,” the source said.

Early on Friday, helicopter gunships strafed a string of rebel neighbourhoods in the southwest of the city. Clashes also broke out in the Al-Jamaliya district, adjacent to Aleppo’s historic old quarter, a human rights watchdog said.

Three people were killed in shelling of the southern Fardoss district and one was shot dead in the Maysaloon neighbourhood, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported. PTI
 

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