In a deeply distressing case that has once again brought the issue of Love Jihad to the forefront, a young Hindu nursing student from Aligarh has gone missing under suspicious circumstances. The girl, an 18-year-old B.Sc. nursing student undergoing an internship at a hospital on Khair Road, was allegedly lured and abducted by an Islamist man named Mohammad Abdul, who worked alongside her.
According to the victim’s mother, her daughter went missing on September 20, 2025, and has not returned since. The family alleges that Abdul, exploiting the proximity of the workplace, trapped the young woman in a fabricated relationship and has now forcibly taken her away. Disturbingly, the accused’s family has reportedly threatened the girl’s parents, saying, “Chupchaap nikah kara do, beti wapas nahi milegi” (Silently accept the marriage, or you’ll never get your daughter back).
The mother, accompanied by local Hindu organizations and BJP leaders, staged a protest outside the SSP office on September 27, demanding her daughter’s immediate rescue. Overcome with despair, she warned that if police fail to act, she would be forced to self-immolate. Despite multiple visits to the Delhi Gate Police Station, she claims no substantial progress has been made.
ASP Mayank Pathak confirmed that investigation teams have been formed and assured that the victim would be traced within two days. However, Hindu organizations allege that such assurances have become routine, with Love Jihad cases continuing to rise unchecked across Uttar Pradesh.
Leaders from Vishva Hindu Parishad and Bajrang Dal have condemned the incident, calling it part of a larger pattern where Hindu girls are targeted through deceit, emotional manipulation, and threats, all aimed at forced religious conversion. They demanded that the police treat this not merely as a missing person’s case but as a planned conspiracy of religious coercion.
The case underscores the urgent need for authorities to take Love Jihad complaints seriously and enact strong legal provisions to prevent the systematic exploitation of Hindu women. It also highlights the growing frustration among Hindu families, who feel abandoned when their daughters fall victim to such traps under the guise of love and equality.
People of Bharat are aware of how individuals like Maulana Jalaluddin have been operating Islamic conversion syndicates across the northern parts of the country. This is not a simple case. When Abdul and family threaten by saying, “Silently accept the marriage, or you will never get your daughter back,” it clearly shows their radical and criminal mindset. Even after marriage, there is no guarantee that Mohd Abdul won’t force her to eat beef, convert to Islam, or wear a hijab. This is a radical Islamist tactic of forced religious conversion. As Hindus, we must not believe such deceitful claims that she will be happy after marriage. Uttar Pradesh has a strong anti-conversion law, and the authorities must strictly enforce it against those who forcibly convert Hindus through such manipulative means.