The law was passed by Sindh provincial assembly on Monday, making the province the first in the country to allow the minority community to register their marriages.
This was after theNational Assembly committeeon law and justicelast week approved the draft law on Hindu marriages, paving the way for registering marriages in Pakistan's minuscule Hindu minority after decades of delay and inaction.
It marked the first step to help over 3 million Pakistani Hindus, majority of them living in Sindh, to register their marriages.
Ruling Pakistan Muslim League-N (PML-N) lawmaker Ramesh Kumar Vankwani yesterday got support of the Senate Functional Committee on Human Rights for amending the bill.
Interestingly, Vankwani was part of the panel which passed the bill last week but has now become its vocal critic demanding removal of the dissolution clause.
"The clause 12 can be misused to forcefully convert married Hindu women the same way young girls have been kidnapped and forced to convert to other religions," he said.
Senator Farhatullah Babar of Pakistan People's Party also supported removal of what he termed the "repressive" clause.
"It amounts to promoting forced conversions not only of young unmarried girls but also of married Hindu women. It is a grave human rights violation of the Hindus," said Babar.
There is also debate about the Hindu marriage law fixing the minimum age of 18 years for marriage with Hindu parliamentarians like Vankwani saying that Hindu men and women cannot marry until they are 18.
There is growing consensus that the issue of age should be left to the "discretion" of Hindu lawmakers but the removal of the regressive clause is problematic as religious groups involved in forced conversion of Hindu women are opposing it with the support of right-wing political parties.
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