The Pakistani Nobel Laurette
Malala Yousafzai spoke against forced conversions in Pakistan and said "It should be a personal choice and no one, especially a child shouldn’t be forced to accept any faith or convert to any other religion out of the will". The former Pakistani Prime minister Imran Khan has said that forced conversions are 'un-Islamic' and are against the commands of Allah.
Candice Bergen, the Deputy Leader of
Conservative Party of Canada, has commented that "The reports coming out of Pakistan of Christian and Hindu girls being abducted, raped, forced into marriages and coerced to convert from their faith are deeply concerning and need to be addressed". She also called for the re-establishment of
Office of Religious Freedom in Canada to address the issue. In January 2023, members of the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights expressed their alarm at the reported rise in kidnappings, coerced religious conversions and weddings of underaged girls from among religious minorities in Pakistan. They appealed the Government of Pakistan to stop the alleged abuse where people in their teens had been "kidnapped from their families, trafficked … far from their homes (and) made to marry men sometimes twice their age". In 2024, UN human rights experts expressed concerns for lack of protects from forced conversions. They also expressed concern that forced marriages and religious conversions of girls from minority communities were being “validated by the courts, often through the invocation of religious law, resulting in victims being kept with their abductors rather than being allowed to return to their parents.” In 2026, UN experts expressed similar concern and said "Any change of religion or belief must be genuinely free from coercion, and marriage must be based on full and free consent, which is not legally possible when the victim is a child”. ==In Culture==