-
TV soaps and diplomacy as Bangladesh and Turkey grow closer
-
Striking Boeing defense workers to vote on latest contract
-
Australia's opposition ditches commitment to net zero emissions
-
Duffy takes four as New Zealand crush West Indies to seal T20 series
-
South Korea halts flights for college entry exam
-
Trump signs bill to end record-breaking US shutdown
-
EU lawmakers to vote on unpicking green business rules
-
Smith says England speed kings could struggle in Ashes
-
Stocks stutter with focus on Fed, tech after US reopen vote
-
Record-breaking US shutdown ends as political fallout begins
-
France marks decade since harrowing Paris attacks
-
Skubal, Skenes win MLB Cy Young Awards for top pitchers
-
Record rains turn Argentina's farm-filled Pampas plains to wetlands
-
Solar storm brings new chance of vivid auroras, signal disruptions
-
Gauff and Fritz back for United Cup against Swiatek's Poland
-
World's fossil fuel emissions to hit new record in 2025: study
-
US jury: Boeing owes $28 mn to family of Ethiopian Airlines crash victim
-
G7 calls for urgent Ukraine ceasefire, de-escalation in Sudan
-
Bayern stun Arsenal, Man Utd sink PSG in Women's Champions League
-
New Epstein emails claim Trump 'knew about the girls'
-
Brazil tribal chief ready to give Lula a 'talking-to'
-
Clippers' Beal to have season-ending surgery - report
-
Dow ends at record on hopes US government will reopen
-
Portugal's Ronaldo hoping Ireland fans boo him
-
England set for Etihad start to Euro 2028 tournament campaign
-
Sinner cruises past Zverev and into last four of ATP Finals
-
US presses final penny after more than 230 years
-
Baxter says England must be 'selfless' to see off All Blacks
-
Pardoned French-Algerian writer Sansal arrives in Germany
-
Bayern battle back to shock Arsenal in Women's Champions League
-
China hopes US will 'some day' return to climate fold, official tells AFP
-
Trump 'knew about the girls,' new Epstein emails claim
-
Scotland 'optimistic' Russell will be fit to face Argentina
-
Big platforms chart gradual path to self-driving at Web Summit
-
Jane Goodall honored in Washington by conservationists including DiCaprio
-
Tuberculosis killed 1.23 million last year: WHO
-
New Zealand coach Robertson says Twickenham visit is 'why I'm doing the job'
-
Hopes of US shutdown deal fail to sustain market rally
-
US military personnel do not risk prosecution for drug strikes: Justice Dept
-
Jailed writer Sansal on way to Germany after Algeria pardon
-
Ukraine ministers resign over major corruption scandals
-
Record-breaking US shutdown to end as political fallout begins
-
Wallets, not warming, make voters care about climate: California governor
-
Astronomers spot storm on another star for first time
-
G7 foreign ministers seek to boost Ukraine war effort
-
Released Epstein emails allege Trump 'knew about the girls'
-
Rees-Zammit back in Wales 'happy place' after Test return
-
Chelsea winger Sterling's house burgled
-
Auger-Aliassime beats Shelton to get off mark at ATP Finals
-
Argentina's Milei to follow Trump in skipping S.Africa G20: spokesperson
Mass Hindu wedding defies poverty and persecution in Pakistan
Under a chequered marquee dazzling with chandeliers, 122 Hindu couples unable to afford their own weddings were instead married in a mass ceremony in Muslim-majority Pakistan.
In the southern megacity of Karachi, the joint nuptials on Sunday were a riot of celebration in defiance of poverty and persecution.
"I am getting married here because my parents are poor. They cannot afford the wedding expenses," 25-year-old bride Kalpana Devi told AFP, swathed in traditional red attire.
Her financial misfortunes -- and sharing her big day with dozens of other brides -- failed to dampen her spirits.
"I wish that everyone could get married here," she said.
Weddings are a costly affair in Pakistan, where the bride's male relatives are also often expected to pay a dowry to the groom's family, with the expense delaying the marriage of women.
"This is a good opportunity for me as my financial state is very weak. I was not able to raise funds for the wedding," says 25-year-old Sateesh Parmar, the brother of bride Neha Parmar.
The nation is clawing its way out of a financial crisis, and rights monitors have long warned that marginalised Hindus suffer some of the worst socio-economic discrimination in Pakistan.
The Pakistan Hindu Council, which hosted the ceremony, says there are eight million Hindus among the 240 million people living in Pakistan, according to last year's census.
Rights groups say Hindu women are sometimes subjected to forced conversion to Islam through marriage.
Last January, UN experts said there was a reported rise in girls as young as 13 being "kidnapped from their families, trafficked to locations far from their homes, made to marry men sometimes twice their age, and coerced to convert to Islam".
Shiva Kacchi, a Hindu activist, said he spoke with more than 170 families who said their daughters were forcibly converted in 2022.
Police, however, have said that the girls eloped with affluent Muslim men to evade poverty.
"Young girls have many desires, and our parents cannot afford to fulfil them," explained Hindu activist Sundarta Rathor, also involved in arranging the mass wedding.
"The combination of economic challenges and limited education makes them susceptible to external pressures."
J.Williams--AMWN