The government’s recent establishment of the National Commission for Minorities Rights (NCMR) has been presented as a landmark step toward protecting Pakistan’s religious minorities. In a country where discrimination, violence, and systemic exclusion remain routine realities for minority communities, the creation of a statutory body appears, at least symbolically, to acknowledge long-standing injustices. Yet institutions must be measured not by their announcements but by their capacity to change lived outcomes. When examined through data, legal standards, and Pakistan’s human rights obligations, the NCMR Act risks becoming another gesture of recognition without meaningful protection.
Recent figures from the Centre for Social Justice reveal the depth of the crisis facing minority women and children. Between 2021 and 2024, at least 421 cases of abduction and forced conversion of minority girls and women were reported across Pakistan. Over seventy per cent of the victims were minors, many under fourteen, with Hindu and Christian girls disproportionately targeted. The concentration of cases in Sindh and Punjab indicates not isolated criminality but entrenched patterns of abuse enabled by weak law enforcement and social power structures. These numbers expose a systemic failure of protection, particularly for girls whose gender and religious identity place them at the intersection of vulnerability.
Against this backdrop, Pakistan’s long tradition of creating advisory commissions rather than enforcement institutions is deeply concerning. The NCMR largely follows this familiar model. While empowered to review laws, make recommendations, and issue reports, it lacks the authority to compel prosecutions, enforce remedies, or hold state institutions legally accountable. In a justice system already plagued by implementation failures, such soft mandates rarely translate into protection for victims.
The crisis of forced conversions highlights a central legal vacuum. Courts often accept conversion statements from minors without proper scrutiny, police frequently refuse to register cases or side with influential perpetrators, and families face intimidation that discourages the pursuit of justice. The overwhelming proportion of child victims reflects not only criminal wrongdoing but the collapse of child protection mechanisms meant to safeguard minors from exploitation. Constitutional guarantees of equality before the law, freedom of religion, and minority protection remain powerful on paper but fragile in enforcement. Provincial child protection statutes and child marriage restraint laws similarly acknowledge children’s rights, yet loopholes and manipulation of age records routinely allow forced marriages following coerced conversions to proceed. The widening gap between law and lived reality has rendered many constitutional promises aspirational rather than enforceable.
Advisory bodies cannot substitute for strong laws, accountable policing, and survivor-centred judicial processes.
Pakistan’s international obligations further intensify this failure. Under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the state must protect children from abduction and harmful practices. The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women obligates Pakistan to prevent gender-based violence and discriminatory customs. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights guarantees freedom of religion and protection from coercion. Forced conversions of minor girls violate all three simultaneously. The international monitoring bodies continue to raise concerns, yet little structural reform has followed in Pakistan.
Structurally, the NCMR Act raises serious questions about independence. The inclusion of ex officio members from the Ministry of Human Rights, Ministry of Justice, Ministry of Religious Affairs, and Ministry of Interior embeds the executive directly into an institution meant to oversee state conduct. The UN Paris Principles governing national human rights institutions require functional independence from government control. When ministries responsible for policing, prosecution, religious regulation, and policy failures sit inside an oversight body, impartial accountability becomes nearly impossible. This is particularly problematic in Pakistan’s context, where minority rights violations frequently involve police inaction, administrative complicity, and political influence. Forced conversions, mob attacks on places of worship, misuse of blasphemy laws, land dispossession, and intimidation of families routinely occur with weak or biased state response. Embedding these same institutions within the Commission risks transforming it from watchdog to stakeholder in the status quo.
From a gender perspective, the Act remains strikingly silent. Minority women and girls face layered violence, including abduction, sexual assault, forced marriage, forced conversion, domestic servitude, and social isolation. Yet the law does not mandate gender representation in leadership, establish specialised mechanisms for gender-based violence, or provide survivor-centred safeguards such as protection orders, legal aid, or trauma-informed investigations. This omission ignores the reality that minority persecution in Pakistan is profoundly gendered.
It is high time to acknowledge that minority victims do not suffer from a lack of policy discussion and dialogue. They suffer from FIRs not being registered, evidence being ignored, coerced testimonies being accepted, and perpetrators enjoying impunity. On this front, the Act does little to disrupt these realities, given the lack of power of the Commission to hold departments and institutions legally accountable. Thus, it is argued that from a human rights standpoint, the NCMR leans heavily toward symbolic governance. It recognises minority concerns without meaningfully redistributing institutional power. It creates visibility without enforceability. It offers consultation without protection.
Does the Commission serve a political purpose? Undoubtedly. It allows the state to signal progress, respond to international criticism, and showcase reform. But in substantive human rights terms, its capacity to transform outcomes remains extremely limited.
When hundreds of minority girls are abducted and coerced within a few years, the issue is not the absence of dialogue platforms but the lack of political will to confront entrenched power structures and institutional complicity. Advisory bodies cannot substitute for strong laws, accountable policing, and survivor-centred judicial processes. Pakistan today stands in a troubling contradiction. It possesses a constitutional framework promising equality and religious freedom while tolerating a justice system that repeatedly fails those most in need of protection. The data reflects not isolated wrongdoing but a recurring pattern of gendered violence and impunity.
Ultimately, the measure of Pakistan’s commitment to minority rights will not lie in the number of commissions it creates, but in whether minority girls can walk to school without fear, families can seek justice without intimidation, and constitutional rights become lived realities. Until enforcement replaces symbolism and accountability replaces rhetoric, the gap between legal promises and minority experiences will continue to widen, with devastating consequences.
The NCMR may change narratives. Whether it changes lives remains the real test.
The writer is a lawyer, social activist and researcher.
