A murder in Sindh has left religious minorities uneasy throughout Pakistan. A powerful landowner shot a Hindu farmer working his own fields just days ago. Anger built quickly once news of the incident got out. Protests followed, sparked by local leaders and residents calling for accountability.
A voice from the edge of the fields tells it straight – Kailash Kolhi, working leased soil, caught gunfire full in the chest. The trigger pulled by Sarfaraz Nizamani, known for clutching wide stretches of village earth, acting sudden, no signal ahead. Breath stopped mid-air, at the very spot he planted his feet. Reason behind the act? Vanished before words could form.
Few places show the pressure as clearly as homes in Sindh’s Hindu communities, where each day brings new weight. At gatherings, some speakers say this loss is just one moment in a steady pattern – harassment, slights, struggles faced by minority farmers for years.
Fury lit up the streets when word spread about the murder. Voices from Hindu groups rose alongside advocates across Sindh. The crime poured fuel on protests, crowds swelling at every corner. Justice now – that was the cry hammered into the air by marchers.
Detention of suspects without delay became their refrain. Homicide charges, terror counts – both named aloud by those gathered. Families left behind need shelter from fear, speakers repeated.
Anger pulses under every footfall, in every chant that bounces off rooftops.
“Emergency measures must be taken across Sindh to ensure the protection of life,” protestors said, warning that silence and inaction would only embolden further violence.
Blood poured out, whispered Shiva Kachhi – head of Pakistan Darawar Ittehad – his words shaking with rage. Online, a note surfaced, clear as broken pane: not chance, but cold intent shaped the act. Call it plain – he called it killing stripped bare, no pity, no honor.
“The blood of Kailash Kolhi demands justice from all of us. This is not just the murder of one individual, but an attack on humanity, justice, and the fundamental rights and safety of minorities in Sindh. Our struggle will continue until the perpetrators are brought before the law.”
A murder sent shockwaves through the region simply due to its timing. Moments later, Pakistan’s foreign minister stepped forward, criticizing India over treatment of minority groups. His remarks zeroed in on fresh demolitions near a historic site – Faiz-e-Elahi Mosque close to Turkman Gate in Delhi.
Shutting down Pakistan’s remarks outright, India called their words disingenuous. The Ministry of External Affairs said they lacked honesty
“We reject the reported remarks from a country whose abysmal record on this front speaks for itself. Pakistan’s horrific and systemic victimisation of minorities of various faiths is a well-established fact.”
Far from silent today, voices beyond the walls rise higher every morning. Waiting without moving, family members watch judges work at a crawl. Across distant parts of Pakistan, clusters of people keep watchful, minds tied to a single hope – this instance might finally bring consequence. Not tossed away as earlier ones were.