Hyderabad:
The controversy that surrounds three Hindu sisters and their minor cousin who embraced Islam established in a court of justice in the Sanghar district on Friday apparently to dismay the parents.
The Court allowed the two adult sisters to live independently and practice their new religion while being told to the police to give the younger sister and the cousin to the parents on the condition that the two are not coerced in religion.
The court released the arrested computer teacher Farhan Khaskheli, who was blamed for allegedly kidnapping the children who demand at the tip of gun and for forcing them to change the religion, and his brother Zulfiqar Khashheli. They, in addition to two others, were reserved in a FIR housed on June 18 by the parents’ complaint.
Dashina Bai and Harjet Kumar’s parents, whose Muslim names are Cider and Abdul Rafay, were aimed at presenting a company with a personal recognition link (PR) of RS10 million each, ensuring that they will not press their children to return to their old religion. “… [a] The religious belief of the person is not tangible and cannot be seen or touched, since such faith is the matter of the heart and condemnation, therefore, no court could declare such conversion as invalid and without void, “said Judge Asif Ali.
The court also ordered the police to transfer the adult sisters Jiya and Diya, who also renamed Mariam and Khadija, as well as the minors to the confidence of Gosha-E-Aafiat by Jamia Masjid Al-Falah in Karachi. The custody of minors will be delivered to the parents after they send the public relations bonus.
During the hearing, the three sisters and their male cousin deposed before the court that accepted Islam without compulsion or greed. The people accused of kidnapping charges also absolted. “The 17 -year -old Dashina statements and Harjet, 14 have been registered and both minors have deposed that they have adopted Islam with their own free will,” said the judge.
Citing verse number 256 of Surah Baqrah of the Sacred Book, the judge declared that Islam prohibited forced conversion. But he distinguished the case in which in which the element of force becomes evident.
“… It cannot be out of the box to say that minors lacked legal capacity to abjure their religion and the change of religion no, Ipso facto, deprive a father of the right to custody of a child and the applicants who are the true parents of minors have the right to custody.”
Three sisters and their cousin left their home and accepted Islam on June 18. The Hindu community reacted to the incident by claiming that their children were kidnapped.
However, the sisters and their cousins published their video statements on social networks, stating that they have adopted Islam. Even so, the police presented a kidnapping FIR in the parents’ complaint and on June 19 recovered the four of a shelter house near the Katti Pahari area in Karachi and brought them back to Sanghar.
On Friday morning, everyone was produced before the court worried to depose.