Islamabad [Pakistan], August 10 (ANI): A new report by Pakistan’s National Commission on the Rights of the Child (NCRC) reveals widespread discrimination faced by minority children, especially Christians and Hindus, within the Islamic Republic. Titled Situation Analysis of Children from Minority Religions in Pakistan, the report paints a grim picture of systemic bias, institutional neglect, and targeted abuse, calling for urgent government intervention amid scepticism about meaningful action.
According to Christian Daily International, the report highlights “severe challenges” faced by religious minority children, which are part of a disturbing nationwide pattern of marginalization and abuse. Forced conversions, child marriages, and child labour—particularly bonded labour—remain daily realities for thousands of Christian and Hindu children.
One of the most horrifying revelations is the ongoing practice of abducting underage girls from minority communities, forcibly converting them to Islam, and marrying them to older Muslim men. The report states that “few legal options” exist for victims due to institutional bias, weak law enforcement, and public pressure, describing the situation as a human rights catastrophe rather than a legal gray area.
From April 2023 to December 2024, the NCRC received 27 official complaints involving murder, abduction, forced religious conversion, and underage marriage targeting minority children—figures believed to represent only a fraction of the true scale, as many families remain silent out of fear of retaliation or further victimization.
Christian Daily International notes the situation is most severe in Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, where 40% of reported violence against minority children occurred between January 2022 and September 2024. Police data cited in the report reveals 547 Christians, 32 Hindus, two Ahmadis, and two Sikhs among the victims, along with 99 others.
The education system, rather than providing an escape, reinforces exclusion. The NCRC criticizes the Single National Curriculum for its “absence of religious inclusion,” forcing Christian and Hindu students to study Islamic content that contradicts their faith. This negatively impacts their academic progress and GPA, fostering a culture of failure and alienation.
Worse, minority students face social discrimination within schools. Teachers and classmates reportedly ridicule or isolate children once their religious identity is known. Testimonies collected reveal that children from oppressed caste and minority backgrounds hesitate to sit at the front of classrooms, ask questions, or even drink water from shared glasses. They are mocked for their beliefs and pressured to convert to Islam with promises of “divine rewards.”
The findings expose a brutal truth: Pakistan’s minority children are not just left behind but deliberately sidelined and systemically abused.
The report also highlights bonded labour, with Christian and Hindu children often trapped in forced work at brick kilns or in agriculture. Their families, burdened by intergenerational poverty and discrimination, receive little to no protection from the state.
Christian Daily International underscores the NCRC’s call for immediate reforms, including legal protections against forced conversion and child marriage, inclusive education policies, and enforcement of child labour laws. However, NCRC Chairperson Ayesha Raza Farooq acknowledged dismal progress due to “fragmented efforts, lack of coordination, and limited political will.”
Pirbhu Lal Satyani, NCRC’s representative for minority rights in Sindh, described minority children as “the most marginalized,” facing “stigma, stereotyping, and structural exclusion.”
The NCRC’s findings are a national shame. The international community, including watchdogs and religious rights groups, should see them as a call to action. Pakistan has long portrayed itself as a nation of religious tolerance, but this government-backed report exposes a starkly different reality for Christian and Hindu children.
Pakistan can no longer claim ignorance or denial. Its institutions have documented the crisis. The question remains: will it act or continue to be complicit?
