Pakistani Hindu says he is forced to retract discrimination charge

July 01, 2016 05:10 pm | Updated October 18, 2016 12:57 pm IST - ISLAMABAD:

A Hindu reporter in Pakistan’s state-run news agency on Friday claimed he was being pressurised to retract his allegations that he was barred from drinking water in the same glass and sharing utensils with other Muslim staff at the office after his colleagues found out his religion.

Sahib Khan, a senior reporter with Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) in Karachi, had alleged that his bureau chief had asked him to “use separate utensils to eat and drink in the office because some colleagues had reservations.”

But after the issue was brought to limelight through media reports and led to backlash and demands that the action should be taken against those involved in discrimination against him, his boss started pressuring him into falsifying such reports, Mr. Sahib Khan claimed.

His boss made him sit for 4 hours

“On Wednesday, he [the bureau chief] made me sit in his office for over four hours, pressurising me into falsifying media reports on the incident,” he was quoted as saying by the Dawn .

“He wants me to say that all such reports circulating in the media are lies. He even said ‘if you can take extreme measures, so can we’,” Mr. Khan alleged.

Mr. Khan, who hails from Dadu district, was initially appointed as a reporter in APP Islamabad and was transferred to Hyderabad and then Karachi in April this year.

When his son visited his office

He had alleged that the discriminatory attitude started soon after his younger son Raj Kumar visited his office and everyone found out that he was Hindu.

“Actually my name contains the word ‘Khan’ so everyone in the office initially thought I was Muslim. When I introduced my son as Raj Kumar, they asked me in amazement if I was Hindu. The very next day, our bureau chief called me up for a meeting and asked me to use separate utensils for eating and drinking at work because others had problems,” he said.

Misleading, baseless: bureau chief

APP Karachi bureau chief Parvez Aslam, however, in a statement to the daily, has termed the allegations

“misleading” and “baseless.”

Mr. Aslam said there was “no discrimination against any minority member working at the APP on any basis, let alone religion.” He also denied reports that Mr. Khan was being “mistaken” for a Muslim earlier due to his surname “Khan.”

‘All knew he was Hindu’

“As a matter of fact, all his [Sahib’s] colleagues were well aware that he was a Hindu by religion but there was no discrimination against him at any stage,” he said.

Mr. Aslam said the APP management investigated the reported incident following a “malicious” letter from the Pakistan Institute of Labour Education and Research (Piler) and found that all charges were “frivolous.”

Journalist unions have condemned the alleged discrimination against Mr. Khan.

Secretary of the Karachi Union of Journalists (Dastoor group) Shoaib Khan has condemned the incident and demanded a thorough probe into it.

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