Diwali: Pakistan’s Punjab announces cash cards for minorities, doubles uplift fund

Commuters ride past a huge bird cage amid a street in Lahore on October 30, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 31 October 2024
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Diwali: Pakistan’s Punjab announces cash cards for minorities, doubles uplift fund

  • Underprivileged members of minorities to receive $37.79 per quarter under Minority Card initiative, says Punjab CM 
  • Pakistani Hindus are celebrating one of Hinduism’s most popular festivals, Diwali or “Festival of Lights,” today

ISLAMABAD: The chief minister of Pakistan’s Punjab province, Maryam Nawaz Sharif, has announced cash cards for minorities and vowed to double the amount for uplifting their places of worship and graveyards, as the country’s Hindu community celebrates Diwali festival today, Thursday. 

Known as the “Festival of Lights,” Diwali is one of the most popular festivals of Hinduism. It is usually observed between mid-October and mid-November and is believed to ward off evil spirits and bring prosperity to the community.

At a ceremony held in Lahore to mark Diwali with members of the Hindu community in attendance, Sharif announced a gift of Rs15,000 [$53.98] per family for 1,400 families in Punjab for the occasion. 

“I am also about to announce that with so much interest and dedication, we have come up with the Minority Card,” Sharif said. “I have told them to launch this Minority Card by Dec. 20.”

Sharif said that as per the initiative, underprivileged people among the minorities will be given Rs10,500 [$37.79] per quarter. 

“We are starting this with 50,000 people in Punjab but god willing, next year we will not only increase the number of the beneficiaries, cards and families but also this amount of Rs10,500,” she added. 

Sharif said the provincial government was taking measures to ensure safety of minorities. She announced that a panic button had been installed for members of the minority community in police stations, adding that virtual police stations were also instructed to entertain complaints by minorities apart from women and children. 

Sharif announced that she had also doubled the fund for minorities that would be used for the uplift of their graveyards and places of worship.

According to the latest digital census conducted last year, over 96 percent of Pakistan’s population is Muslim, with the remaining four percent comprising 5.2 million Hindus, 3.3 million Christians, 15,992 Sikhs and others.

Religiously motivated Pakistani ultra-conservative groups have conducted attacks on Pakistani minorities. There have been dozens of instances of mob violence against religious minorities in the South Asian nation in recent years, including an attack on Christians in Jaranwala, a town in Punjab province, where churches, homes and businesses were set ablaze in August 2023. 

In the southern Sindh province, Hindus have frequently complained about forced conversions, particularly of young girls within their community, and attacks on temples.

Pakistan’s governments have repeatedly said guaranteeing the safety of minorities is a top concern and priority for them in the Muslim-majority nation. 


Pakistan moves to digitize payments for 10 million women under flagship poverty initiative

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Pakistan moves to digitize payments for 10 million women under flagship poverty initiative

  • BISP Official says accounts will be linked to phones to boost financial inclusion and curb payment deductions
  • Over 1.9 million SIMs issued as the nationwide rollout continues across provinces ahead of the March deadline

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s flagship poverty alleviation initiative, the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP), plans to equip 10 million women with digital bank accounts linked to their phone numbers within four months in one of the largest such exercises in the world, one of its top officials said on Wednesday.

Launched in 2008, the initiative is named after the late former prime minister Benazir Bhutto and has a budget of Rs716 billion ($2.5 billion) during the current fiscal year. Through its Benazir Kafaalat — or financial assistance — program, BISP provides quarterly stipends of Rs13,500 ($48) to around 10 million women.

In an exclusive interview with Arab News, BISP Secretary Amir Ali Ahmed said the opening of digital bank accounts for the beneficiaries was part of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s initiative related to a cashless economy and digital transformation of the country.

“I’m glad to share that 10 million bank accounts, wallet accounts were created,” he said. “This is a follow-up of the same exercise whereby now 10 million SIMs are being distributed.

“It is significant to share that the entire beneficiary network that we have is female-centric,” he continued. “So these are 10 million female accounts that have been created.”

Ahmed said the process of issuing mobile phone SIM cards to BISP beneficiaries had started on November 17 and would be completed by March next year.

“Let me share that this is one of the largest such exercises to be conducted in the world which is female-centric, linked with financial inclusion and financial empowerment.”

The BISP official added that out of the more than 10 million beneficiaries, only five to 10 percent had bank accounts, but nearly 90 to 95 percent were excluded from the system.

He said they were being linked to the banking system with cellphone SIMs that are being distributed with the help of the IT ministry, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority, National Database and Registration Authority and telecom companies across the country.

“We feel that this initiative of the government of Pakistan will not only result in financial empowerment of our beneficiaries, it will also result in financial inclusion of a segment which was not part of the banking sector in Pakistan,” he said, adding that the move will also lead to transparency.

In the past, there have been complaints of women not getting their full payment from bank officials in the absence of their own accounts, but Ahmed said this was going to change.

“They will be free from any exploitation at the agent networks, the queues that one would witness, the complaints of corruption or deductions that would emerge,” he continued.

According to official data, more than 1.9 million SIMs have so far been issued for BISP beneficiaries across the country.

The province of Punjab leads the rollout with 810,597 SIMs, followed by Sindh with 523,629 and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa with 371,427 SIMs.

In other regions, Azad Jammu and Kashmir has received 59,617, Balochistan 82,826, Gilgit-Baltistan 45,184, and Islamabad 4,508 SIMs.