India: Muslim drugs, rapes Hindu employee, tells her to ‘convert to Islam if you want to keep your job’
The Qur’an says “There is no compulsion in religion” (2:256). However, what constitutes “compulsion” is in the eye of the beholder. One may choose to die rather than convert. No compulsion!
‘Convert to Islam if you want to keep your job’: Lucknow’s Lulu Mall supervisor Faraz arrested for drugging, raping Hindu woman and blackmailing her with obscene video
OpIndia, July 9, 2025:
A female Hindu employee at Lulu Mall in Uttar Pradesh’s Lucknow charged her manager, Farhaz also known as Faraz, with rape and blackmail. He also forced her to convert to Islam, leading to his arrest. She disclosed that he gave her a cold beverage that was spiked with drugs and then sexually violated her.
He recorded the disturbing act on video, which he later used to blackmail her and extort money and jewellery. The victim endured cigarette burns, verbal abuse and physical assaults when she resisted. He also issued death threats to her. The complaint additionally indicated that the accused persistently pressured her to embrace Islam.
He claimed that she need to comply in order to keep her job at the mall. Moreover, he repeatedly disparaged Hinduism and its deities, which deeply hurt the woman’s religious beliefs. An initial investigation revealed that the perpetrator might have links with suspicious social media accounts and conversion networks….
Taliban forces administer electric shocks to women over breaches of burqa rules
Terror is the only tool in the Taliban’s box for bringing about adherence to its rules, because it’s the only tool the Qur’an gives them: “Make ready for them all that you can of force and of warhorses, so that by them you may strike terror in the enemy of Allah and your enemy…” (Qur’an 8:60)
The Qur’an requires that women wear the veil (24:31), but isn’t specific about how much of themselves they must cover. The idea, however, is that it is their responsibility to prevent male temptation. So the Taliban force them to cover themselves entirely, as the sight of any part of their bodies could set a man off, and that would be the woman’s fault.
Taliban forces using electric shocks on Afghan women over dress
Rukhshana Media, July 12, 2025 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):
Taliban forces are administering electric shocks to women over breaches of a hijab mandate so strict it even requires them to cover their faces in public, reporting by Rukhshana Media has found.
Victims and eyewitnesses described women being knocked unconscious by electric shocks as they resisted efforts by Afghanistan’s notorious morality police to take them into custody over their dress. Others reported that the devices were being widely used in women’s prisons.
The rights group Amnesty International has called for a global ban on devices that deliver a shock on direct contact, calling them “inherently abusive” and saying they can cause serious injury and even death. International policing standards state that electric shocks should only be used as a last resort and in self-defence.
Nafisa*, 20, was shopping for winter scarves with her sister in Kabul last October when the pair were confronted by four uniformed Taliban morality police. One demanded to know why she wasn’t dressed like her sister, who wore head to toe black with a face covering, then ordered her to get into his vehicle. Terrified, she gripped her sister’s hand tightly and tried to stand her ground as a woman working with the police pulled her away.
“When I resisted, they gave me an electric shock. After that, I remember nothing,” recalls Nafisa, who was held overnight in a cold, dark police cell with eight other women and three girls.
One young woman had been beaten and detained for being improperly dressed, even though she was wearing full-length clothing. improper hijab, another for having contact with a man she wasn’t related to. Others had been arrested for begging on the street.
Nafisa’s older sister Zohal*, 24, stammers nervously as she remembers that day. “Nafisa fell to the ground right before my eyes and the Taliban treated her like a corpse, throwing her into the vehicle and driving away,” she says. “It was the worst moment of my life and those seconds felt like hours. I kept asking people for help, but they walked away. No one dared to say a word to the Taliban.”
Both women said they were left feeling traumatised by the incident, and both subsequently took antidepressants for a period of several months….
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