In Karachi, Pakistani Hindus marry in mass ceremony to cut costs
In Karachi, Pakistani Hindus marry in mass ceremony to cut costs/node/2437916/pakistan
In Karachi, Pakistani Hindus marry in mass ceremony to cut costs
Pakistani Hindu couples arrive for a mass marriage ceremony organised by the Pakistan Hindu Council, a non-profit organisation, in Karachi on January 7, 2024. (AFP)
In Karachi, Pakistani Hindus marry in mass ceremony to cut costs
Pakistan Hindu Council has been organizing mass wedding ceremonies for poor couples for the past 16 years
Around 4 million Hindus live in Pakistan, or about 1.9 percent of the country’s population, and 1.4 million are in Sindh
Updated 08 January 2024
AFP
ISLAMABAD: Over 120 Hindu couples tied the knot in the southern port city of Karachi on Sunday night, in a ceremony organized by the Pakistani Hindu Council (PHC) so that the poor can save mounting wedding expenses.
The Pakistan Hindu Council (PHC) has been organizing annual mass weddings for the past 16 years. For the purpose, they invite applications and shortlist the most deserving candidates based on income and social status.
Around 4 million Hindus live in Pakistan, or about 1.9 percent of the country’s population, and 1.4 million are in Sindh.
The 17th Combined Marriages Program as it was called, was held at Railway Ground at Pakistan’s busy I.I. Chundrigar Road where relatives of over 120 Hindu couples danced and sang to celebrate the festive occasion.
“I am getting married here because my parents are poor. They cannot afford the wedding expenses,” Kalpana Devi, one of the 122 brides chosen and financially supported by the minority NGO to get married in a mass wedding ceremony, told AFP.
“A wedding at home is the best but when a family chooses to hold a wedding here, they can give their daughter something better as a wedding gift.”
PHC head Ramesh Kumar Vankwani said the council selected 200 couples this year out of which it supported 122 couples “to the wedding day.” He added that the PHC received applications from all over the country.
“Our priority (in the selection) is given to fatherless couples or those whose father is physically disabled,” Vankwani told AFP.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s opposition alliance is continuing its sit-in outside the Parliament House in Islamabad for the second day on Saturday, seeking shifting of jailed former prime minister Imran Khan to a private hospital for treatment of his worsening eye condition.
The protest follows a rare prison visit earlier this week by Barrister Salman Safdar, appointed as amicus curiae by the Supreme Court to assess Khan’s health and living conditions at Rawalpindi’s Adiala jail. In his report, Safdar highlighted “seriousness” of Khan’s ocular condition and recommended an independent examination.
On Friday evening, opposition members gathered outside the parliament building in Islamabad to stage a sit-in, with the police locking its gates and cordoning off surrounding roads to prevent protesters from gathering in front of the building, witnesses and opposition leaders said.
Mehmood Khan Achakzai, the head of the Tehreek-e-Tahafuz-e-Ayeen-e-Pakistan opposition alliance, criticized the authorities for the measures to prevent opposition members from reaching the sit-in venue in Islamabad.
“We are not the ones who make threats, but if you continue with this attitude, after two or three days every roundabout in Pakistan will be closed,” Achakzai said on X late Friday. “Then we will not even be able to handle the people.”
In an earlier post on X, the alliance said its leadership would continue the sit-in “until Imran Khan is admitted to Al-Shifa Hospital.”
“We have staged a sit-in for the earliest medical check-up of Imran Khan, which would take just ten minutes,” Achakzai told reporters on Friday evening. “If it is conducted, we will end our protest.”
According to a Feb. 6 medical report from the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) cited in Safdar’s filing, Khan was diagnosed with “right central retinal vein occlusion” after reporting reduced vision in his right eye. He underwent an intravitreal injection at PIMS and was discharged with follow-up advice.
In his interaction with Safdar, Khan said he had suffered “rapid and substantial loss of vision over the preceding three months” and claimed his complaints had not been addressed promptly in custody. He further said he had been left with “only 15 percent vision in his right eye.”
Safdar’s report noted that the 73-year-old former premier appeared “visibly perturbed and deeply distressed” over the loss of vision, though it also recorded that he expressed satisfaction with his safety, basic amenities and food provisions in prison.
Responding to the controversy, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Tariq Fazal Chaudhry rejected PTI’s claims that Khan had been suffering from an eye issue since October last year, noting that the ex-premier was visited by his sister on Dec. 2 but she did not mention the medical issue.
“Medical report will be compiled again, the chief justice of the Supreme Court is himself monitoring this case,” he said. “Wherever it will be requested, Imran Khan’s eye will be examined at.”
Chaudhry vowed there would be no negligence.
Khan has been in custody since August 2023 in connection with multiple cases that he and his party describe as politically motivated. The government denies the allegation.
Concerns over his health resurfaced after authorities confirmed he had briefly been taken from prison to a hospital in Islamabad for an eye procedure. While the government said his condition was stable, Khan’s family and PTI leaders alleged they were not informed in advance and that he was being denied timely and independent medical access.