Persecution of minorities in pakistan

ajtr

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Venting my spleen

Irfan Husain
(16 hours ago) Today
By Irfan Husain
I AM often asked by friends and readers why I continue writing when it`s obvious that my columns make no difference to anything. I reply that by writing, " mein dil ki bharas nikal dayta hun " . I think the closest English translation is that I vent my spleen.

And believe me, there`s a lot happening to vent my spleen about. Currently, the issue that`s making my blood boil is the truly disgusting story about Aasia Bibi, the Christian mother who has been given the death sentence for alleged blasphemy. Pakistani non-Muslims have often been targeted by the blasphemy law that carries the death penalty if the accused are found guilty.

All it takes to subject an enemy to the mischief of this malign law is for a few people to charge him or her of blasphemy and let injustice take its course.

While most politicians and the media in Pakistan have taken little note of yet another Christian being persecuted for her faith, the rest of the world is appalled and outraged.

Pope Benedict XVI could not have been more forthright in his condemnation, and his support for Aasia Bibi when he said recently: "Over these days, the international community is, with great concern, following the situation of Christians in Pakistan who are often victims of violence or discrimination. In particular, I today express my spiritual closeness to Ms Aasia Bibi and her family."¦"

The death sentence passed on the hapless Aasia Bibi is entirely in line with this recent pronouncement by the Islamic State of Iraq, an extremist ally of Al Qaeda: "All Christian centres, organisations and institutions, leaders and followers are legitimate targets of the mujahideen."

This declaration of war on Christendom followed an attack on an Iraqi church that killed nearly 60 Christians. While these words and actions from a vicious, bloodthirsty terrorist group is in keeping with their track record, the silence of Muslim leaders and the media is outrageous.

Had a mosque in the West been attacked with such heavy casualties, and an extreme Christian group had made a similar threat against Muslims, the outcry across the Islamic world would have been deafening. Western targets would have been attacked from Jakarta to Marrakesh.

As this anti-Christian discrimination, persecution and violence rises in many Muslim countries, we continue mouthing the mantra of Christians being Ahle-Kitab , the People of the Book. In actual fact, the Islamic State of Iraq has declared them wajibul-qatal , or `deserving of murder`.

Thus, Christians have now joined the list of faiths and sects declared wajibul-qatal by extremists subscribing to an orthodox strain of religion that has infected so many Muslim radicals. Ahmadis have long been in this category. So are others, including followers of the tolerant, Sufi brand of Islam.

In Pakistan, these unfortunate people have been ruthlessly targeted by a number of radical groups that have been allowed to proliferate over the years. Secular Muslims, of course, have always been fair game.

Instead of acting vigorously to close down these terrorist groups, the army and successive governments in Pakistan have sought to use them to further short-sighted and entirely illegal agendas across our borders. The problem, of course, has always been that once these killers get legitimacy and support from the state, they turn their attention to targets within the country.

But the state is not alone in the spread of extremism: the independent media must share the blame. For decades now, a section of the Urdu press has carried a message of hate and intolerance, one amplified by the scores of private TV channels that are now the principal means of shaping public opinion.

Some time ago, one popular TV anchor on a religious programme almost urged a cleric on the panel to declare Ahmadis wajibul-qatal. Within days of the programme, two Ahmadis were duly murdered. But he is not the only one fanning the flames of this madness. Others hold forth in their studios and spew out this message of hatred against all those who do not subscribe to the belief of the majority Sunni doctrine.

There is a tendency in humans and animals alike to prey on the weak, and kick those below us in the pecking order. In today`s Pakistan, non-Muslims have been assigned a place in society where they can be persecuted with impunity by those above them on the social ladder. People who accuse non-Muslims falsely of blasphemy just to settle a score or grab some property are never prosecuted. Those who murder Christians, Hindus and Ahmadis are never sentenced.

Time and again, the state has failed in its duty to protect all of its citizens. Several non-Muslim prisoners, accused of blasphemy, have been murdered while in police custody by fanatics who have then escaped punishment. And if the accused have been pronounced not guilty by the courts, their lives are always at risk when they are released from custody.

So if Aasia Bibi is freed on appeal, she won`t be able to return to her village where a mob led by the local mullahs could storm her home. As far too many Christians know, this often happens in Pakistan.

The question is not why militants are targeting non-Muslims in Pakistan: the real question is why we are not angrier at this increasing persecution. Why don`t our politicians and the media come out loudly and unequivocally against extremism? As it is, too many of us hedge our condemnation with ifs and buts. We bring in Palestine, Iraq and Afghanistan as though people like Aasia Bibi are responsible for western policies.

The grim reality is that whatever we may say about the protection non-Muslims are supposed to be accorded in Muslim societies, they are increasingly at risk at the hands of vicious fanatics. That they operate in our midst, immune from legal sanctions, is a telling comment on the majority.

Now that the extremists have declared war on all those who do not conform to their narrow, harsh version of Islam, we have no option but to fight them with every means available to us. Above all, we should not tolerate those who advocate their cause, and justify the slaughter of innocent non-Muslims. We could start by demanding a fair deal for Aasia Bibi.
 

ajtr

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International Religious Freedom Report 2010 : Pakistan​
[/B]

Countries of Particular Concern
Pakistan


FINDINGS: Systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of freedom of religion or belief continue in
Pakistan. Religiously discriminatory legislation, such as the anti-Ahmadi laws and blasphemy laws,
foster an atmosphere of intolerance. Sectarian and religiously-motivated violence is chronic, and the
government has failed to protect members of religious minorities from such violence and to bring
perpetrators to justice. Growing religious extremism threatens the freedoms of expression and religion or
belief, as well as other human rights, for everyone in Pakistan, particularly women, members of religious
minorities, and those in the majority Muslim community who hold views deemed un-Islamic by
extremists.

In light of these severe violations, USCIRF again recommends in 2010 that Pakistan be designated a
"country of particular concern," or CPC. Since 2002, USCIRF has recommended Pakistan be named a
CPC, but the U.S. State Department has not followed that recommendation.

The religious freedom situation in Pakistan remains deeply troubling, with further deterioration possible
due to the actions of religiously-motivated extremists, some of whom have ties to Al-Qaeda or to the
Afghan Taliban. The current Zardari government has taken positive actions to promote religious
tolerance. However, the government has failed to reverse the continuing erosion in the social and legal
status of members of religious minority communities and in the ability of members of the majority
Muslim community to discuss sensitive religious and social issues freely. A number of Pakistan's laws
abridge freedom of religion or belief. Anti-Ahmadi laws discriminate against individual Ahmadis and
effectively criminalize various practices of their faith. Blasphemy laws have been used against members
of religious minorities and dissenters within the majority Muslim community, and frequently result in
imprisonment on account of religion or belief and/or vigilante violence. The Hudood Ordinances—
Islamic decrees predominantly affecting women that are enforced alongside Pakistan's secular legal
system—provide for harsh punishments for alleged violations of Islamic law by both Muslims and non-
Muslims. Anti-government insurgents espousing an intolerant interpretation of Islam continue to impose
a harsh, Taliban-style rule in areas under their control. The government's response to religiously-
motivated extremism remains inadequate, despite increased security operations. Pakistan also continues
to promote the flawed "defamation of religions" concept at the UN, which would undermine the
freedoms of religion and expression internationally.

PRIORITY RECOMMENDATIONS: Promoting respect for freedom of religion or belief must be an
integral part of U.S. strategy in Pakistan. The forces that threaten Pakistani and U.S. security interests are
largely motivated by a violent extremist ideology that rejects international human rights standards,
including freedom of religion or belief, for both Pakistan's non-Muslims citizens and members of the
majority Muslim community. The U.S. government should clearly state its concern for religious freedom
as an essential element in U.S. policy in Pakistan; urge Pakistan to reinforce the rule of law and to bring
its laws, particularly those regarding blasphemy and the Ahmadis, in accordance with international
human rights standards; urge Pakistan to halt its international promotion of the flawed "defamation of
religions" concept; and urge Pakistani authorities, including at the provincial level, to promote respect for
human rights and religious tolerance in public education. Additional recommendations for U.S. policy
toward Pakistan can be found at the end of this chapter.

Religious Freedom Conditions:

Government Policies toward Religious Groups and Activities


The political landscape in Pakistan has changed significantly since the country's return to constitutional,
civilian government in 2008. Democratic parliamentary elections took place in February 2008. The
winning coalition selected Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani as Prime Minister in March 2008, and Pervez
Musharraf, a former general who had come to power through a military coup d'etat, was replaced by Asif
Ali Zardari as President of Pakistan in September 2008. Both Zardari and Gilani are civilian politicians
and leaders of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP). Zardari is also the widower of Benazir Bhutto, a
popular political leader of the PPP and former Prime Minister who was assassinated in December 2007,
reportedly by Sunni militants linked to Al-Qaeda. The Bhutto and Zardari families are Shi'a Muslims
from the province of Sindh in a country traditionally dominated by Sunnis from Punjab.

The political power of President Zardari and of the office of the Presidency, previously dominant under
past military rulers, has eroded in the past year. In March 2009, under pressure from opposition parties
and many of the country's lawyers, President Zardari was forced to reinstate Supreme Court Chief Justice
Chaudhury and other judges whom President Musharraf had suspended. President Zardari also was
forced to accept the reinstatement of the opposition-led provincial government in Punjab, Pakistan's most
populous province. By the end of the reporting period, President Zardari's official powers appeared
certain to be further limited by proposed constitutional reforms effectively restoring a parliamentary form
of government. The Pakistani military and intelligence services continued to be influential, particularly in
regard to national security issues.

Despite continuing political and security challenges, the Pakistani government under President Zardari
and Prime Minister Gilani has taken positive steps regarding religious freedom. Both the President and
the Prime Minister publicly committed to combating religious extremism and to protecting the rights of
members of Pakistan's religious minority communities (with the evident exception of the Ahmadis, who
are viewed as a special case in Pakistan). In November 2008, the government appointed prominent
minority-rights advocate Shahbaz Bhatti as Federal Minister for Minorities with cabinet rank. Mr. Bhatti
has used his position as Federal Minister to obtain government assistance for victims of the worst
instances of religiously-motivated mob violence, to advocate publicly for reform or repeal of the
blasphemy laws, to gain increased public attention to the concerns of the religious minorities, to secure
increased employment opportunities in public service for members of religious minority communities,
and to promote religious tolerance through the creation of what are termed "District Interfaith Harmony
Committees." In addition, in March 2009 the government appointed a Christian jurist as a judge in the
Lahore High Court (at the time of the appointment there were no other Christians serving as judges in
Pakistan). In May 2009, the federal government announced a five percent quota in federal employment
for members of religious minority communities. On May 28, 2009, "Minorities' Solidarity Day" was first
officially celebrated as a federal holiday in Pakistan, and the government designated August 11 as annual
"Minorities' Day."

Nevertheless, discriminatory laws, promulgated in previous decades and persistently enforced, have
fostered an atmosphere of religious intolerance and eroded the social and legal status of members of
religious minorities, including Shi'a Muslims, Ahmadis, Hindus, and Christians. Government officials do
not provide adequate protections from societal violence to members of these religious minority
communities, and perpetrators of attacks on minorities seldom are brought to justice. This impunity is
partly due to the fact that Pakistan's democratic institutions, particularly the judiciary and the police, have
been weakened by endemic corruption, ineffectiveness, and a general lack of accountability.

Religious Freedom Concerns in Pakistani Education

A significant minority of Pakistan's thousands of religious schools, or madrassas, reportedly continue to
provide ongoing ideological training and motivation to those who take part in violence targeting religious
minorities in Pakistan and abroad. In mid-2005, the Pakistani central government renewed its effort to
require all madrassas to register with the government and to expel all foreign students. By that year's
end, despite an outcry from some violent extremist groups, most of the religious schools had registered.
However, the registration process reportedly has had little if any effect on the curricula, which in many of
these schools remains intolerant and includes exhortations to violence. The government also still lacks
controls on the madrassas' sources of funding. It remains doubtful whether these efforts to curb
extremism through reform of the country's Islamic religious schools will be accompanied by other
measures that would make them effective. Moreover, these efforts do not adequately address the much
wider problem of religious extremism in Pakistan and the continued and unwarranted influence of militant
groups on the rights and freedoms of others.

Religious freedom concerns are also evident in Pakistan's public schools. Pakistani primary and
secondary schools continue to use textbooks that foster prejudice and intolerance of religious minorities.
Social Studies and Pakistan Studies textbooks frequently recount historically inaccurate events that paint
Hindus and Christians in a negative light. Fifth-grade students read official textbooks claiming that
"Hindus and Muslims are not one nation but two different nations. The Hindus could never become
sincere in their dealings with the Muslims." Hindu beliefs and practices are contrasted negatively with
those of Islam. Bangladesh's struggle for independence from Pakistan is blamed in part on the influence
of Hindus in the education sector of the former East Pakistan. India is portrayed as Pakistan's enemy.
Israel is characterized as not being a legitimate state. Such materials are not restricted to Islamic studies
textbooks but occur in both early elementary and more advanced social studies texts that are used by all
public school students, including non-Muslims. Moreover, the subjects in textbooks are heavy on stories,
biographies, and poems having an Islamic religious character.

Efforts to improve curriculum guidelines and to produce and publish new public school textbooks have
been delayed by practical and ideological hurdles. Although "The New Education Policy 2009" is being
implemented predominantly to raise the literacy rate in Pakistan, the new policy maintains Islamic Studies
as a compulsory subject. One positive change allows minorities the option of taking an ethics course
from third grade onwards, whereas the previous policy offered this option only in grades 9 and 10.
However, Pakistani non-governmental organizations argue that this option means little in practice because
current ethics textbooks are based on previous curriculum guidelines which contain Islamic biases.
Moreover, critics argue, minority students still tend to avoid opting out of Islamic Studies for fear of
being isolated from the rest of the class. Some students also fear that if they take ethics and it becomes
known that they belong to a religious minority their grades may be negatively impacted.

Sectarian or Religiously-motivated Violence

Over at least the past decade, Pakistan has suffered from sectarian and religiously-motivated violence,
much of it committed against Shi'a Muslims by Sunni extremists, but also against Ahmadis, Christians,
and Hindus. Beginning in early 2008, armed extremists, some of whom have ties to Al-Qaeda or to the
Afghan Taliban, intensified their attacks, including bombings. The following examples of sectarian or
religiously-motivated violence should be seen as illustrative rather than a comprehensive listing of the
numerous and often fatal attacks perpetrated on innocent Pakistanis by extremists who claim religious
justification for their crimes.

By early 2009, Sunni extremists gained effective control in large portions of rural northwestern Pakistan,
where they killed hundreds of Shi'a civilians, imposed a harsh, Taliban-style of justice, and displaced
Shi'a, Sikh, Hindu, and other minority populations. Jizya (the traditional tax on non-Muslims under Islamic
law) was imposed on Sikhs and Hindus and violence was threatened for non-compliance. Sunni extremists
destroyed shrines and tombs with religious or cultural significance to other Muslims, notably
the shrine of revered Pashtun poet and Sufi mystic Rahman Baba, which was bombed in March 2009.
This act, compared by some observers to the destruction by the Afghan Taliban of the monumental
Buddhas of Bamiyan, appeared intended to erase visible expressions of other belief systems, in this case
an inclusive, tolerant form of Islam. Also, as in Afghanistan, the extremists severely restricted women's
access to education, health care, and employment outside the home.

The Pakistani government initially responded by attempting to accommodate the Pakistani Taliban. In
April 2009, the central government accepted a locally-negotiated "peace plan" for the Malakand division,
including the scenic Swat Valley, that permitted the imposition of sharia law in exchange for an end of
hostilities with government forces. Under both international and domestic pressure, the government
subsequently reversed course and launched military offensives that met with some success, although
many internally displaced persons, particularly members of religious minority communities, including the
Sikhs, feared to return. At the end of the reporting period, despite the Pakistani military maintaining a
large presence in the division, insurgents remained in effective control of some areas.

Sectarian or religiously-motivated violence reached beyond Pakistan's tribal northwest. Two separate
suicide attacks on Shi'a religious processions in December 2009 killed over 40 people in Karachi and
eight in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani-controlled Kashmir. Scores were injured in both instances.
In June and September 2009, two prominent leaders of Pakistan's large Barelvi Sunni Muslim community
were assassinated, including Pakistan's Minister for Religious Affairs. The first assassination was by
suicide bomber, a tactic largely restricted to Sunni extremists. Barelvis are condemned by Sunni
extremists for certain of their beliefs and practices, including the use of music for religious purposes and
the veneration of living and dead religious figures. Both Barelvi leaders had publicly condemned the
Pakistani Taliban and supported the government's military campaign against Sunni insurgents. In March
2010, a leading cleric and member of another Sunni group, Ahl-e-Sunna-wal-Jama'a, previously the
banned group Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistan, was wounded and his son killed in a shooting in Karachi. Sipah-
i-Sahaba had been implicated in attacks on Shi'a Muslims. Also in Karachi later the same day, another
Sunni cleric identified as a prominent member of the Deobandi community and the head of an anti-
Ahmadi organization was shot and killed along with his son and two associates.

Sunni extremists have also targeted Ahmadis and Christians. 14 Ahmadis were murdered during the
2009-2010 reporting period in attacks which appear to have been religiously-motivated (e.g., in attacks in
which robbery does not appear to have been a motive). In the most recent case, three Ahmadi
businessmen were shot to death on April 1, 2010 on the streets of Faisalabad, Punjab, the scene of
previous anti-Ahmadi violence. None of the perpetrators have been brought to justice. From June to
August 2009, a series of mob attacks took place against Christian communities in Punjab, most notably in
Gojra, where in late July/early August, eight Christians were killed and 18 injured, and two churches and
almost 75 houses burned, following an accusation that Christians had desecrated the Koran. A fact-
finding team by the independent, non-governmental Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reported that
the violence in Gojra had been planned in advance.

Due to their minority status, Pakistan's Hindus, Christians, and Sikhs may be more vulnerable to crime,
including robbery and kidnapping for ransom. Hindu temples, due to their visibility, were particular
targets for robbery. Hindu businessmen in Sindh have been increasingly subject to extortion or
kidnappings for ransom. Hindus have also been targeted in the province of Balochistan, where they are
the largest religious minority and where the security situation is problematic due to a long-running ethnic
insurgency. Ransom, even of exorbitant amounts, is sometimes characterized as jizya, thus claiming an
Islamic sanction for its imposition on non-Muslims. In February 2010, a kidnapped Sikh businessman


from Peshawar was beheaded by insurgents belonging to the Pakistani Taliban in a remote location on the
border between Khyber and Orakzai Agencies. Two other Sikhs were rescued by the Pakistani military.

There are persistent reports of kidnappings, rapes, and forced conversions to Islam of Hindu and Christian
women, including minors. In March 2010, a Karachi-based Hindu attorney associated with the non-
governmental National Human Rights Commission of Pakistan was quoted as estimating that 20-25
young Hindu women are abducted and forcibly converted every month. The attorney claimed that the
victims' families often fail to register cases with the police out of fear of violent retaliation. The Asian
Human Rights Commission has highlighted the case of a 15-year-old Hindu domestic servant abducted in
Punjab in October 2009. When, through the intervention of the National Peace Committee for Interfaith
Harmony, she was later found to be in the custody of her and her parents' employer, a Muslim landlord, at
a village 130 kilometers away, the parents were told that she had converted to Islam. They were denied
the opportunity to meet with her alone and have not been able to return her home. A Hindu advocacy
group, the Hare Rama Foundation, reported that it was aware of ten similar cases in 2009 of apparent
abductions and forced conversions of Hindu girls. In some such cases, certificates of conversion from
Muslim clerics have been presented to legitimize the conversions. Marginalization and poverty also make
the Christian community in Pakistan vulnerable. The most recent and notorious instance is the
rape/murder in Lahore in January 2010 of a 12-year-old Christian girl, allegedly by her Muslim employer,
a prominent attorney and former Lahore Bar Association president.

The Ahmadi Minority and Anti-Ahmadi Legislation

Among Pakistan's religious minorities, Ahmadis are subject to the most severe legal restrictions and
officially-sanctioned discrimination. Ahmadis, who may number between three and four million in
Pakistan, are prevented by law from engaging in the full practice of their faith and may face criminal
charges for a range of religious practices, including the use of religious terminology. Pakistan's
constitution declares members of the Ahmadi religious community to be "non-Muslims," despite their
insistence to the contrary. Barred by law from "posing" as Muslims, Ahmadis may not call their places of
worship "mosques," worship in non-Ahmadi mosques or public prayer rooms which are otherwise open
to all Muslims, perform the Muslim call to prayer, use the traditional Islamic greeting in public, publicly
quote from the Koran, or display the basic affirmation of the Muslim faith. It is also illegal for Ahmadis
to preach in public, to seek converts, or to produce, publish, or disseminate their religious materials.
Ahmadis also are restricted in building new houses of worship, holding public conferences or other
gatherings, and traveling to Saudi Arabia for religious purposes, including the hajj (the pilgrimage to
Mecca required of all able-bodied Muslims). According to the State Department's annual Human Rights
Report issued in March 2010, 94 Ahmadis faced criminal charges in Pakistan for religious offenses during
the past year: 37 under the blasphemy laws and 57 under Ahmadi-specific laws.

Obtaining a Pakistani national identity card or a passport requires a religious affirmation denouncing the
founder of the Ahmadi faith as a false prophet. Moreover, because Ahmadis are required to register to
vote as non-Muslims and national identity cards identify Ahmadis as non-Muslims, those who refuse to
disavow their claim to being Muslims are effectively disenfranchised from participating in elections at
any level. Since Ahmadis were declared non-Muslim in 1974, no Pakistani government has attempted to
reform the anti-Ahmadi laws and regulations, with the sole exception of an abortive attempt in late 2004
to remove the religious identification column in Pakistani passports, which would have enabled Ahmadis
to participate in the hajj. This initiative was reversed in March 2005 when the government restored the
column, reportedly in response to pressure from Islamist political parties.

Widespread Abuse of the Blasphemy Laws


Prescribed criminal penalties for what is deemed to be blasphemy include life imprisonment and the death
penalty. Blasphemy allegations, which are often false, result in the lengthy detention of, and sometimes
violence against, Ahmadis, Christians, Hindus, and members of other religious minorities, as well as
Muslims. Because the laws require neither proof of intent nor evidence to be presented after allegations
are made, and include no penalties for leveling false allegations, they are commonly used by extremists to
intimidate members of religious minorities and others with whom they disagree. Accusers also often use
these laws to carry out a vendetta or gain an advantage over another. Minor procedural changes have not
diminished the misuse of these laws. The negative impact of the blasphemy laws is further compounded
by the absence of due process in the proceedings, and during blasphemy trials, Islamic militants often
pack the courtroom and publicly threaten violence if there is an acquittal. Such threats have proven
credible, since violence has sometimes followed an acquittal. Although no one has yet been executed by
the state under the blasphemy laws, individuals have been sentenced to death. Several of those accused
under the blasphemy laws have been attacked, even killed, by violent extremists, including while in police
custody. Those who escape official punishment or attacks by extremists are sometimes forced to flee the
country.

Scores of arrests on blasphemy charges are reported each year in Pakistan. Among notable recent cases
are the following. Five Ahmadi teenagers were released on bail in July 2009 after six months'
imprisonment following a blasphemy charge. They had been accused of writing the Prophet
Muhammad's name on the walls of a toilet in a Sunni mosque. No physical evidence of this existed. In
September 2009, a 20-year old Christian man was found dead in his jail cell in Sialkot, Punjab two days
after having been arrested on charges of desecrating the Koran. Family and friends alleged that his only
"offense" had been to admire the daughter of Muslim neighbors. Pakistani human rights activists alleged
that he had been murdered, although police maintained that the death was suicide. In January 2010, a
young Christian man was sentenced to 10 years in prison for allegedly burning pages of the Koran. A
Muslim neighbor had reportedly seen him disposing of trash. Despite calls by senior officials, including
Prime Minister Gilani, for review of Pakistan's blasphemy laws following the anti-Christian violence in
Gojra, no action has yet taken place.

Other Religiously-based Laws Negatively Affecting Human Rights, especially of Women
Under the Hudood Ordinances, rape victims run a high risk of being charged with adultery, for which
death by stoning remains a possible sentence. In October 2003, the National Commission on the Status of
Women in Pakistan reported that as many as 88 percent of women prisoners, many of them rape victims,
are serving time in prison for allegedly violating these decrees, which criminalize extramarital sex. The
Hudood laws apply to Muslims and non-Muslims alike. The UN Committee against Torture and the UN
Special Rapporteur on Torture have stated that the punishments of stoning and amputation breach the
obligation to prevent torture or cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment or punishment under
international human rights standards and treaties. Although these extreme corporal punishments may not
have been carried out in practice in Pakistan, lesser punishments such as jail terms or fines have been
imposed. In a positive development correcting one of the most heavily criticized aspects of these
ordinances, in December 2006 then-President Musharraf signed into law a bill curtailing the scope of the
Hudood Ordinances regarding rape charges. The new law removed the crime of rape from the sphere of
the Hudood laws and put it under the penal code, thereby doing away with the requirement that a rape
victim produce four male witnesses to prove the crime. Under the new legislation, convictions for rape
must be based on forensic and circumstantial evidence. This change followed another amendment to the
Ordinances enacted in July 2006 allowing women convicted of purported sexual transgressions to be
released on bail rather than having to remain in prison—sometimes for lengthy periods—waiting for their
cases to come to trial.


International Terrorism Linked to Religious Extremism

In addition to the serious religious freedom problems described above, Pakistan has become a significant
locus of religious intolerance and religiously-motivated violence in the region and beyond. The well-
planned November 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India, have been linked to the Pakistan-based
extremist group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, a connection Pakistan's then-Interior Minister publicly acknowledged in
February 2009. Lashkar-e-Taiba has been designated by the State Department as a foreign terrorist
organization. Pakistani authorities have made efforts to curb such extremists, who also threaten Pakistan's
own security. There are extensive reports, however, that the Pakistani military and intelligence agencies
have provided safe havens, operational bases, and other support to Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Afghan Taliban,
and other extremists operating against neighboring Afghanistan and India. Due to such support, the Afghan
Taliban were able to regroup, re-arm, and intensify cross-border attacks inside Afghanistan after being
ousted by U.S. and coalition forces, substantially increasing instability and violence in that country. The
State Department had named the Taliban regime of Afghanistan a "particularly severe violator" of religious
freedom from 1999 until the regime was deposed in 2001.

Leadership in Seeking a Global Blasphemy Law

The government of Pakistan also has been active in the international arena in promoting limitations on
freedom of religion or belief. As it has done in UN bodies since 1999, in March 2010 Pakistan once again
presented a resolution to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva supporting measures to halt the so-
called "defamation of religions." The backers of the resolution claim that their aim is to promote religious
tolerance, but in practice such laws routinely criminalize and prosecute what is often deemed—capriciously
by local officials in countries where such laws exist—to be "offensive" or "unacceptable" speech about a
particular, favored religion or sect. Defamation of religion laws clearly violate principles outlined in
international human rights instruments, which guarantee the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and
religion, as well as freedom of expression. Moreover, they appear to grant rights to entire religions rather
than to individuals. Regrettably, the resolution again passed the Council March 2010, although by the
smallest margin ever. Seventeen countries voted against the resolution and 8 abstained. (For more
information, see the discussion of the UN in this report's chapter Promoting International Religious
Freedom through Multilateral Institutions.)

U.S. Policy

The U.S. government has viewed Pakistan as a strategic country and, at least during some periods, as an
important regional partner. During the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, Pakistan was of crucial
importance in U.S. efforts to bolster the anti-Soviet resistance. Following the September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks against the U.S. homeland, Pakistan was again crucial to U.S. efforts in Afghanistan and
to the global campaign against al-Qaeda. The relationship has often been marked, however, by strain,
disappointment, and mistrust. Many Pakistanis view the United States as untrustworthy because of what
they see as a lack of U.S. support in Pakistan's conflicts with India, the cancellation of U.S. assistance
over Pakistan's acquiring of nuclear weapons, and the sharp drop-off in U.S. engagement with Pakistan
following the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989 and the end of the Cold War. Many in
Pakistani civil society also view the United States as prone to focus on the security component of the
relationship, providing at times massive assistance to Pakistan's powerful military establishment,
excusing past military rule and downplaying attendant human rights abuses when this suits U.S. interests,
and failing to support those elements of Pakistani society that espouse democracy and respect for human
rights. Anti-Americanism is a popular sentiment in Pakistan, feeding off nationalist concerns over
Pakistani sovereignty and the conviction of many religious conservatives that U.S. policy and values are
hostile to Islam.

The Obama administration has actively engaged with Pakistan, viewing Afghanistan and Pakistan as a
single theater in the on-going conflict with al-Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban. On January 22, 2009, only
two days after President Obama's inauguration, he joined Vice President Biden and Secretary of State
Clinton at the State Department for the announcement of Ambassador Richard Holbrooke as U.S. Special
Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. In making the announcement, Secretary Clinton stated that
"It has become clear that dealing with the situation in Afghanistan requires an integrated strategy that
works with both Afghanistan and Pakistan as a whole, as well as engaging NATO and other key friends,
allies, and those around the world who are interested in supporting these efforts."

In March 2009, following a two-month-long interagency policy review, the Administration announced "a
comprehensive, new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan," with an increased focus on Pakistan. The
White Paper outlining this new strategy defined the core U.S. goal to be "to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat
al Qaeda and its safe havens in Pakistan, and to prevent their return to Pakistan or Afghanistan." The new
strategy viewed the security of the two South Asian neighbors to be interrelated, seeing Pakistan-based
insurgents as undermining Afghanistan while the "insurgency in Afghanistan feeds instability in
Pakistan." Among the announced objectives to achieving this goal was "assisting efforts to enhance
civilian control and stabile constitutional government in Pakistan and a vibrant economy that provides
opportunity for the people of Pakistan." Enhancing human rights, including freedom of religion or belief,
was not among the announced objectives or the major recommendations in the new strategy.

In October 2009, President Obama signed the Enhanced Partnership with Pakistan Act of 2009 (also
known as the Kerry-Lugar Bill) authorizing an additional $7.5 billion in mostly non-military assistance to
Pakistan ($1.5 billion annually over five years). The assistance is to support democratic institutions and
to promote rule of law, to promote economic development, to build Pakistan's human resources, with
particular emphasis on women and children; and to strengthen U.S. public diplomacy efforts to combat
extremism and to promote a better understanding of the United States among the Pakistani people.
Particularly controversial in Pakistan, however, were provisions intended to lend U.S. support to effective
civilian control of the powerful Pakistani military by the elected government. Many Pakistanis viewed
these provisions, which include a reporting requirement to the U.S. Congress to describe civilian
oversight of the Pakistani military, the process for determining Pakistan's defense budget, and even the
promotion process for senior military officers, as intrusive and as an alleged affront to Pakistani
sovereignty.

In March 2010, a session of the U.S.-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue was held in Washington, DC at the
Secretary of State/Foreign Minister level. According to the joint statement issued after the talks, the "core
foundations of [U.S.-Pakistani] partnership are shared democratic values, mutual trust and mutual
respect." Human rights was once again absent from the list of bilateral concerns worthy of dialogue,
which included "economy and trade; energy; security; strategic stability and non-proliferation; law
enforcement and counter-terrorism; science and technology, education; agriculture; water; health; and
communications and public diplomacy."

USCIRF Activities

USCIRF has long been concerned with the serious religious freedom abuses taking place in Pakistan, some
of which the government of Pakistan condones. Since 2002, USCIRF has recommended annually that
Pakistan be designated a CPC. The Commission has highlighted religious freedom problems in Pakistan
through public hearings, meetings with the Administration and the Congress, letters to senior U.S.
government officials, and press statements.

In March 2009, USCIRF held a hearing on Capitol Hill entitled, "Pakistan: The Threat of Religious
Extremism to Religious Freedom and Security." Experts discussed legal restrictions on religious freedom

in Pakistan; the threat, particularly to women and religious minorities, of religiously-motivated violence
and intolerance; strategies for promoting tolerance in Pakistan's educational system, including Islamic
schools; and how U.S. policy toward Pakistan could better support the institutions that promote respect
for human rights, including freedom of religion or belief. USCIRF welcomed the Administration's
March 27, 2009 announcement of "a comprehensive, new strategy" that "focuses more intensively on
Pakistan than in the past, calling for more significant increases in U.S. and international support, both
economic and military, linked to Pakistani performance against terror."

During a July 2009 meeting with a visiting delegation from Pakistan's Council of Islamic Ideology, an
advisory body sponsored by the Pakistani government, USCIRF raised concerns about religious freedom
in Pakistan, including Pakistan's laws on blasphemy and those restricting the rights of members of the
Ahmadi religious community. In August 2009, USCIRF wrote the U.S. Special Envoy for Afghanistan
and Pakistan, Ambassador Richard C. Holbrooke, urging him to support efforts underway within Pakistan
to remove the blasphemy laws and other discriminatory legislation that have had a negative impact on
freedom of religion or belief and other universal human rights of Pakistan's citizens, particularly
members of religious minorities.

In September 2009 and again in February 2010, USCIRF facilitated a series of briefings by Pakistan's
Federal Minister for Minorities Affairs for members of Congress and their staff, National Security
Council and State Department officials, academic experts, and representatives of non-governmental
organizations. These briefings focused on the current situation of Pakistan's religious minority
communities and the Pakistan government's response to an upsurge in religiously-motivated violence.
USCIRF also worked with House staff to develop H.Res. 764 that expressed the sense of the House of
Representatives on the importance of inter-religious dialogue in Pakistan and of religious freedom and
related human rights for Pakistanis of all religious faiths.

Based on these contacts and USCIRF's own research, the Commission concludes that the contest with
religious extremists now taking place in Pakistan, and in neighboring Afghanistan, requires that the
United States bolster the position of those elements within Pakistani society that respect democratic
values, the rule of law, and international standards of human rights, including freedom of religion or
belief. To this end, the Commission has the following recommendations.

Recommendations

I. Advancing Religious Freedom through U.S. Programs and Policies

In addition to designating Pakistan as a CPC, the U.S. government should:
clearly articulate upholding religious freedom and related human rights as an essential element of the
U.S. strategy toward Pakistan, and support Pakistani civil society institutions that work to uphold and
guarantee these rights;
have Special Representative Richard Holbrooke increase his engagement on religious freedom and
related human rights, as well as designate a member of his team to report to the Special
Representative exclusively on human rights in Pakistan, specifically including religious freedom and
sectarian violence;

from the funds provided through the Enhanced Partnership with Pakistan Act of 2009, make
allocations in the Pakistan assistance package for fiscal years 2010-2014 to strengthen the promotion
and protection of religious freedom and tolerance by:


--ensuring that assistance for government capacity development that goes to the Pakistani
executive, legislative and judicial branches also addresses religious freedom and related human
rights, such as the programs developed by the Federal Ministry of Minorities Affairs that promote
pluralism and tolerance;

--ensuring that assistance focusing on improving security and legal institutions through police
training addresses religious freedom and related human rights; and

--implementing programming that works to ensure the promotion of the rights and full
participation of women and girls in Pakistan's social and political life.

as the number of U.S.-based implementing partners declines, ensure that USAID engages Pakistani
government offices and qualified Pakistani organizations to promote religious freedom and tolerance,
including by:

--supporting the work of religious communities and civil society groups to provide advocacy
training and empowerment for minorities;

--supporting the work of the Federal Ministry of Minorities Affairs to promote inter-religious
respect and tolerance at the national and local levels, including by print, broadcast, and web-
based media, to respond to the challenge of religious extremism and religiously-motivated or
sectarian violence;

--supporting the work of the Pakistan federal government's District Interfaith Harmony
Committees and similar efforts at the local level to promote conflict resolution and more effective
responses by Pakistani authorities and civil society to instances of religiously-motivated
discrimination, intimidation, or violence;

expand U.S. government contacts beyond the Pakistani government to include substantially more
open and public dialogue with a variety of civil society representatives, including groups and political
parties that may be critical of the government or represent diverse viewpoints; and

recognizing that lasting stability in Pakistan will come from a vibrant civil society, expand programs
leading to the sustained engagement of the United States with the Pakistani people, such as the
Fulbright Program, the International Visitor Program, and other exchanges for professionals, students,
and religious and civil society leaders from all of Pakistan's diverse religious and ethnic communities.

II. Ending Violations of Religious Freedom in Pakistan

The U.S. government should urge the government of Pakistan to:

decriminalize blasphemy and, in the interim period until that action is completed, immediately
implement procedural changes to the blasphemy laws that will reduce and ultimately end their abuse,
and ensure that those who are accused of blasphemy and their defenders are given adequate
protection, including by investigating death threats and other actions carried out by militants, and that
full due process is followed;

reinforce the rule of law, including by strengthening protections for the freedoms of religion, speech,
association, assembly, and the media, and by strengthening an independent judiciary;

prioritize the prevention of religiously-motivated and sectarian violence and the punishment of its
perpetrators, including by:

--making greater efforts to disarm violent extremist groups and provide the necessary security to
Shi'a, Sufis, Christians, Ahmadis, Hindus, Sikhs, and other minority religious communities in
their places of worship and other minority religious sites of public congregation;

--investigating acts of religiously-motivated and sectarian violence, and punishing perpetrators in
a timely manner;

--constituting a government commission that is transparent, adequately funded, inclusive of
women and minorities, and defined by a mandate to study and produce recommendations on ways
that the Pakistani government can proactively diminish religiously-motivated and sectarian
violence, particularly in areas with a heavy concentration of members of religious minority
communities;

rescind the laws targeting Ahmadis, which effectively criminalize the public practice of their faith and
violate their right to freedom of religion guaranteed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights;

cease toleration or support of the Taliban or other terrorist groups by any element of the Pakistani
government, including the intelligence services;

confront and work to address the consequences of the political alliances maintained by past military-
dominated governments with Islamist political parties, which afforded an excessive amount of
influence to these groups, and which, in turn, had a strong negative impact on religious freedom in
Pakistan; and

halt its practice at the UN Human Rights Council, General Assembly, and other international fora of
promoting and supporting the problematic concept of "defamation of religions," which seeks to
undermine the international human rights guarantees of freedom of religion and freedom of
expression.
The U.S. government should urge the government of Pakistan, and provincial authorities, as appropriate,
to:
investigate and close any religious schools that provide weapons or illegal arms training in
perpetrating acts of violence;

set national textbook and curricula standards that actively promote tolerance towards all religions, and
establish appropriate review and enforcement mechanisms to guarantee that such standards are being
met in government (public) schools;

initiate efforts through existing regional and international institutions to establish mechanisms for
mutual review of textbook guidelines, textbook content, curricula, and teacher-training programs in
order to promote positive concepts of tolerance and respect for the rights of others and to exclude
material promoting intolerance, hatred, or violence against any group of persons based on religious or
other differences;

move quickly to implement improved guidelines for textbooks used in public schools and to replace
current public school textbooks with ones that exclude messages of intolerance, hatred, or violence
against any group of persons based on religious or other differences;

open the Federal Ministry of Education's current process of development of textbook guidelines to
participation by civil society and by representatives of religious minority communities in cooperation
with the Federal Ministry of Minorities Affairs; and

ensure that a madrassa oversight board is empowered to develop, implement, and train teachers in
human rights standards, and to provide oversight of madrassa curricula and teaching standards.

http://www.uscirf.gov/images/annual%20report%202010.pdf
 

ajtr

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Our intolerant ways




Saturday, November 20, 2010
Babar Sattar
The writer is a lawyer based in Islamabad.
The biggest challenge for Pakistan is curing the disease of intolerance afflicting our state and society. It is intolerance toward the choices of other individuals, groups and identities and a violent exhibition of such intolerance that lies at the heart of most of our fault-lines and conflicts. The death sentence slapped on Aasia Bibi – the 45-year old Christian farm worker from Nankana Sahib – under Pakistan's unconscionable blasphemy law is only the latest manifestation of our intolerant ways. The immoral and unjustifiable laws forming part of our statute books, the discriminatory manner in which laws are applied by state institutions, and the bigoted cultural ethic prevalent in the society that encourages the state to institutionalise intolerance in the name of religion, honour or order, together create a vicious cycle that dismembers the foundational promise of our Constitution i.e. all citizens are to be treated as equals.
Aasia Bibi's tale provides the textbook example of a bad law that needs to be struck off not only because it is not amenable to application without abuse but also as it is discriminatory in substance. A woman gets into a quarrel with coworkers on a farm when they put religious prejudice into practice and treat her as an untouchable for being Christian. Offended by her audacity to confront an invidious bias practiced unabashedly by the majority community, the Muslim women decide to hold back no punches. They tell the local mullah that the Christian woman was calling Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) names. The police intervene and take her into protective custody. But unable to sustain the pressure mounted by the local virtue brigade, the custodians of law and order record an FIR against the woman under Section 295-C of the Pakistan Penal Code.
Once this critical threshold is crossed, the law and the beards speak the same bigoted language. A person charged under Section 295-C of PPC stands condemned as a blasphemer and has neither any chance of getting a fair trial before a court of law nor the benefit of the principle that a person is deemed to be innocent until proven guilty. The intimidation tactics of the frothing mullahs that succeed in getting the FIR registered by the police also limit the ability of the district judiciary from approaching the matter with an open mind. The bigoted legal framework and cultural ethic creates a conflict of interest for the judge. If he subjects the merits of the case to proper scrutiny and finds the accused innocent he will attract the wrath of the beards and could jeopardise his physical safety. A guilty verdict on the contrary satiates the appetite of the local bigoted brigade.
Years later when the High Court hears the appeal against the verdict, it is no longer a social or religious issue, but a purely legal one. There are no bearded mobs outside the courthouse. The appellate court will throw out the guilty verdict. The victim's family will breathe a sigh of relief and probably relocate to a different locality/community (if it hasn't already been chased out). No life will be lost and the apologists for our blasphemy law will continue to highlight the fact that no one has ever been hung in Pakistan under Section 295-B or C of the PPC. Meanwhile the victim will have lost half a decade of her life locked up behind bars, her children will have been deprived of valuable years of nurturing, the state will have reiterated its role as a malevolent force disinterested in justice or fair play and the sordidly intolerant societal ethic will have gotten strengthened.
Laws are generally formed to civilise the collective existence of human beings and to control their base emotions and reactions to things they find disagreeable. After millennia of evolving consciousness humankind has reached a stage where equality is deemed to be an established human right. But this is the ideal that constitutionalism and rule of law aim to realise. There was a time when keeping slaves was a legitimate concept, even within the Islamic tradition. There was a time when 'separate but equal' was considered to satisfy the right to equality in the US and so black and white kids were sent to different schools. There was a time when women did not have a right to vote. But our collective conscience kept evolving and things changed. Slavery stood abolished, women got franchise, and the caste system and concept of being 'untouchable' was formally eradicated.
None of this means that individual prejudices have extinguished and civilised countries and societies have rid themselves of biases. But what they have done is incorporate laws so that social inequality does not translate into legal inequality, and they have built institutional structures and social traditions that prohibit and discourage the exhibition of religious, ethnic, sectarian and caste prejudices. Other than incorporating laws and structures meant to protect substantive rights of individuals, progressive societies insist on due process of law to outlaw vigilante justice and violence in the name of 'honour'. These substantive and procedural guarantees enable the state to function as a neutral arbiter in regulating the relationship between individuals and groups. While there remain 'us' and 'them' identities at the social level, such distinctions are formally delegitimised by the state to uphold the guarantee of equality.
In Pakistan we have unfortunately opted for the retrogressive path. Instead of identifying our social, cultural and religious biases and drafting laws to curtail them, we have incorporated laws to endorse and reflect our bigotry. Our greatest folly as a nation has been that we have erased the distinction between crime and sin, and endowed the state with the obligation to implement religion and piety. We are probably the only country in the world that insists that the state has (or can have) a religion. Once a state claims to have a religion (as opposed to its citizens in their individual capacities) how can it ever function as a neutral arbiter towards individuals or groups professing a different faith? Such a state can be benevolent and can patronise individuals who believe in a different religion, but can it ever deliver on its guarantee of equality?
If we are serious about creating a state that treats all citizens equally, we need to do away with Article 2 of the Constitution. Most of those horrified by the existence of the abusive blasphemy laws also share the belief that the state must have no business poking into the religious convictions of its citizenry. But they desist from making this larger argument and instead criticise blasphemy laws or the maltreatment of the Ahmadi community on functional or ethical grounds to avoid locking horns with our bigoted virtue brigade. We will be unable to fix the problem of religious intolerance and violence so long as we continue to advocate the rights of religious minorities on grounds of mercy and compassion. Law has no business dividing up our society into majority and minority communities on the basis of religion, or endorsing the religious biases of the most intolerant sections of the majority community.
If we wish to be a society where individuals are legally equal and (to borrow from Martin Luther King) judged by the content of their character and not the label of religion that attaches to them due to their incidence of birth, we must take the state out of religion. So long as the state actively interferes with the lives of citizens to implement religious diktat as opposed to providing a framework where everyone is facilitated in practicing his/her religion without interference from anyone else, our fellow Pakistanis who associate with Christianity, Hinduism, Sikhism and other religions will remain lesser citizens. Let us start by seeking the abolition of the blasphemy law, but on the basis of principle and not as apologists seeking charity for others.
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Yusuf

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Pakistan--No room for diversity; no future for minorities

The Pakistani state is a racist entity and it has an unwritten policy of treating different ethnic groups accordingly. What's worse, it's not that a group of supremacist zealots, a fascist party, came into power, as was the case with Nazi Germany, but rather the state itself is a product of prejudice. The Two Nation Theory--the philosophy behind the culmination of a separate homeland for the Muslims of the Indian sub-continent--appealed to the superiority complex of the Sub-continent's Muslims who thought of themselves as being racially and morally superior to the Hindus.
This racist attitude didn't end with the partition of the Indian Sub-continent, but was rather retained by both the intelligentsia and state machinery, as well as the privileged inhabitants of the "Land of the Pure," and used for the disenfranchisement of the less privileged indigenous populations--the Baluch, Pakhtoon and Sindhi people. This discriminatory attitude is the most convenient reasoning tool for the Pakistani Elite for justifying their genocidal policies.
The Punjabi make up most of the country's population and thus are the biggest contributors of manpower to the Pakistani Army, which puts them on top of the food chain. They are allocated most of the country's resources, making them the most developed ethnicity in Pakistan. In Punjab the mighty Pakistani Army is a rather tamed beast, which for a security state is odd. Civilians have rights such as being tried in civil courts if suspected of terrorism, and the Punjab Police--not the Pakistani Army--carry out search operations or ask civilians to pull over for "snap checking," which too is only conducted at the entrances of the posh cantonment areas in the Punjab.
The Punjab obviously is also at the center of the country's security and economic policy. Pakistan's Kashmir feud has more to do with Punjab's rivers than with any ideological or humanitarian causes, and its policy of strategic depth stems out of its fear of losing the Punjab to India. The Pakistani state went so far as to conduct nuclear tests in Chaghai and Kharan, Baluchistan, in May 1998, inflicting the indigenous Baluch population with radioactive after-effects such as cancerous mutations and birth deformities.
Pakistan traditionally advocated an agrarian economy because of the Punjab's forte in agriculture, though the province now also has a strong industrial sector, which was supplied with natural gas from the Sui gas fields of Baluchistan decades before the town of Sui was connected to the country's network of gas pipelines.
Following Punjabis in dominance are the Mohajirs (refugees), Muslim migrants from India. Pakistan is supposed to be a country for the Muslims of the Indian Sub-continent, which gives the Mohajirs an undisputed right over the country. The migration started after the country's creation in 1947, and continues to this day. The Pakistani state evicted indigenous Sindhi and Baluch people from their personal property to provide the Mohajirs with shelter. The Pakistani state adapted Urdu, the Mohajir language, as the national language despite the fact that Sindhi was more developed at the time. The adoption of Urdu as the national language not only gave the Mohajirs an advantage in seeking jobs, it also marginalized job prospects for the other ethnic groups, namely the Baluch, Sindhi and Pakhtoons, most of whom have native languages far different from Urdu.
Today the Mohajir rule the country's economic capital of Karachi with an iron fist, under the guise of a racist terrorist political party called the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (United National Movement), MQM. The MQM rose to power during the 1980s under the patronage of General Zia ul Haq's military government. Pakistani spy agencies armed and financed the MQM to counter the Sindhi lead Pakistan Peoples' Party (PPP). The MQM not only succeeded in curbing the PPP's influence in urban Sindh, the densely populated Karachi and Hyderabad, but it is also engaged in a sort of ethnic cleansing of all other ethnic groups in Karachi. It does this by either bulldozing entire settlements of other ethnic groups through the City District Government Karachi's anti-encroachment operations or usually by unleashing sporadic sprees of indiscriminate killings, the latest such massacres carried out by the MQM are its targeting of the Baluch of Karachi.
The Federal Government's approach to the MQM's terrorist operations is rather soft. In Baluchistan, Islamabad has preferred consecutive all out military assaults over talks with Baluch Nationalists who are very focused in their armed operations. Whereas in Karachi, the civil-military establishment has an altogether different approach: it plays deaf, mute and blind to the MQM's target killings, abduct and dump, arson and grenade attacks, and extortion. The recent so called Surgical Operation is concentrated over Baluch and Pakhtoon localities, though the recent violence claimed at least 60 Baluchs in four days of MQM terrorism. One has to question: 1) Why were calls for an Army Operation turned down and Police Action opted for by both the government and the army, even after the Sindh province's Interior minister, Zulfiqar Mirza's dramatic revelations made on live TV? 2) Why is the operation focused on Baluch neighborhoods, or other minority ethnic groups like Pakhtoon or Sindhi localities? These people, after all, are the ones who are worst affected by the violence?
What is more appalling about racist Pakistan is the apathy shown by non-governmental institutes like the supposedly Free Media. While the MQM is busy massacring other ethnic groups, the mainstream media is at best being conservative, i.e., not disclosing complete details for the sake of the "national interest" or are busy depicting the Mohajirs as victims.
If you visit Quetta, the capital of the Baluchistan Province, you'll witness that the Pakistani government has a sharply hostile outlook. There is the usual state terrorism and then there is the state's psychological warfare against the people. The Pakistani Frontier Corp paramilitary asks people to pull over just because of the way they're dressed or because they are Baluch. There are machine-gun posts at all major road junctions, outside residential areas and in universities, CCTV cameras installed, and informers with licenses to kill. Pakistan Air Force jets fly thundering over the city, whereas elsewhere in Pakistan's major cities PAF jets are seldom seen flying.
The Pakistani banking sector, too, has played its role in the economic backwardness of Baluchistan. Their only policy is that of transferring deposits to their Head Offices, while allocating a small amount for lending to local businesses or project financing.
Whereas Mohajirs are welcome to Pakistan anytime they decide to immigrate, and Afghan refugees are free to move, do business or buy property, Baluch from West Baluchistan, occupied by Iran are not welcome.
Pakistan's racist elite also find it unacceptable for any Western countries to open their consulates in Baluchistan. The British council, which started operating in Baluchistan in the year 2001, was shut down shortly after receiving frequent threats by pro-Taliban forces, though the only task the British Council was serving was conducting the General Certificate of Education exams and facilitating admissions in the UK. The American intent to establish an American Consulate in Baluchistan has caused quite a stir among the Pakistani supremacists. They're vehemently opposed to the idea, though there are American Consulates in all major cities of Pakistan. One has to wonder what is so threatening about having an American Consulate in Baluchistan?
No matter how Pakistani patriots put it, Pakistan has proved itself a racist country: where the country's civil-military intelligentsia are very fond of the dictum "divide and rule;" where the elite have advocated progressive policies for certain ethnic groups and used others as cannon fodder; and where the masses prefer stereotyping. Such a country has no room for diversity, and the minorities--ethnic or religious--don't have much of a future. Neither do languages, for all languages other than Urdu and Punjabi are in danger.
Comment: Pakistan--No room for diversity; no future for minorities - Crisis Balochistan
 

Blackwater

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Minorities Run for your life in Pakistan

Eighteen bloodied bodies, shot Gestapo-style, lay by the roadside. Men in army uniforms had stopped four buses bound from Rawalpindi to Gilgit, demanding that all 117 persons on board alight.Those with Shia sounding names on their national identification cards were separated out. Minutes later it was all over; the earlier massacres of Hazara Shias in Mastung and Quetta had been repeated.
Having just learned of the fresh killings, I relayed the news on to colleagues and students at the cafeteria table. Some looked glumly at their plates but, a minute or two later, normal cheerful chatter resumed. What to do? With so many killings, taking things too seriously can be bad for one's mental health.
In Pakistan one's religious faith, or lack of one, has become sufficient to warrant execution and murder. The killers do their job fearlessly and frequently. The 17th century philosopher and mathematician, Blaise Pascal, once observed that "men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it for religious conviction".
Equipped with just enough religion to hate those with another faith — but not enough to love their coreligionists — Pakistanis have mostly turned their backs on religious atrocities. Exceptionally grotesque ones, such as when 88 Ahmadis quietly praying in Lahore on a Friday were turned into corpses, have also failed to inspire public reaction. Mass executions do not interest Pakistan's religious parties, or Imran's Khan's PTI. For them, only the killings by American drones matter.
The title of this essay deliberately excludes Hindus, Christians, and Parsis. The reason: these communities were never enthused about India's partition (even though some individual members pretended to be). Indeed, they were soon slapped with the Objectives Resolution of 1949 which termed them "minorities", hence freaks and outcasts dispatched to the margins. Some accepted their fate, keeping a low profile. Others altered their names to more Muslim sounding ones. The better off or more able ones emigrated, taking valuable skills along with them.
But with Shias and Ahmadis it was different. Whatever they might feel now, they were enthusiastic about Pakistan. Mr Jinnah, born a Gujrati Shia Muslim, believed that Muslims and Hindus could never live together peacefully but that Muslims, of course, could. Chaudhry Zafarullah Khan, an Ahmadi leader, was commended by Jinnah for having eloquently argued the Two-Nation theory, and then appointed by him in 1947 as Pakistan's first foreign minister. Mr Jinnah died early, but Zafarullah Khan lived long enough to see disillusionment. The inevitable had happened: once the partition was complete, the question of which version of Islam was correct became bitterly contentious.
Until recently, Pakistan's Shias did not have the self-image of a religious minority. They had joined Sunnis in supporting Mr Bhutto's 1974 decision to declare Ahmadis as non-Muslim. But now they are worried. The Tribal Areas are convulsed in sectarian warfare: Kurram, Parachinar and Hangu (in the settled districts) are killing grounds for both Sunni and Shia, but with most casualties being Shia. City life has also become increasingly insecure and segregated; Karachi's Shia neighborhoods are visibly barricaded and fortified.
But while Shias are numerous enough to put up a defence, Ahmadis are not. Last month, a raging 5,000-strong mob descended upon their sole worship place in Satellite Town, Rawalpindi. Organised by the Jamaat-i-Islami, various leaders from Jamaat-ud-Dawa, Lashkar-e-Taiba and Sipah-e-Sahaba addressed the rally demanding the worship place's security cameras and protective barricades be removed. The police agreed with the mob's demands, advising the Ahmadis to cease praying. The worship place has now been closed down.
Forbidden from calling themselves Muslims, Ahmadi children are expelled from school once their religion is discovered. Just a hint may be enough to destroy a career. Knowing this, the school staff at a high school in Mansehra added the word 'Qadiani' to the name of an Ahmadi student, Raheel Ahmad, effectively eliminating the boy's chances of getting a university education. The same school also held an anti-Ahmadi programme, distributing prizes to winners.
The latest outrage is that new ID cards, issued by the Punjab government, require the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) to insert a 'Qadiani' entry in the online forms. Ahmadis now do not have the option of declaring themselves non-Muslims. Instead the government demands that they open themselves to public persecution, a method that Nazi Germany used against Jews.
Even dead Ahmadis are not spared: news had reached the Khatm-e-Nabuwat that Nadia Hanif, a 17-year old school teacher who had died of illness ten days ago, was actually an Ahmadi but buried in a Muslim graveyard in Chanda Singh village, Kasur. Her grave was promptly dug up, and the body removed for reburial.
Pakistan's state apparatus, for all its tanks and guns, offers no protection to those deemed as religious minorities. Is it just weakness? Or, perhaps, complicity? While swarms of intelligence agents can be seen in many places, they fail spectacularly to intercept religious terrorists. More ominously, recent months have seen state-sanctioned Difah-e-Pakistan Council (DPC) rallies across the country, drawing many tens of thousands. Prominent self-proclaimed Shia and Ahmadi killers, prance on stage while holding hands in a show of unity.
At the Multan DPC rally on February 17, Khatm-e-Nabuwat leaders bayed for Ahmadi blood while sharing the stage with the famed Malik Ishaq, a self-acclaimed Shia-killer. Newspaper reports say Ishaq was freed last year after frightened judges treated him like a guest in the courtroom, offering him tea and biscuits. One judge attempted to hide his face with his hands. But after Ishaq read out the names of his children, the judge abandoned the trial.
What does the Pakistan Army think it will gain tolerating — or perhaps encouraging — such violent forces once again? Its jawans pay an enormous price in fighting them, and their offshoots, elsewhere in the country. But perhaps the notion that extremists are Pakistan's 'strategic assets' for use in Kashmir and Afghanistan has captured the military's mind. Or, post-OBL, perhaps a miffed leadership seeks to show anger at the US through such rallies. Whatever the explanation, Pakistan's minorities face catastrophe.


Run for your life – The Express Tribune
 

Blackwater

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Rinkle Kumari was Hindu last month


For many years, I was convinced that Sindh is the most liberal and secular province. I thought that minorities were more secure here because of the history deeply rooted mysticism. But that was until I became familar with teenager Rinkle Kumari's tragic tale. One, amongt many, whose story needed to be told.

While most of us know Maya Khan and Veena Malik how many of us know Rinkle Kumari of District Ghotki, Sindh? She was picked up from her home and then forced to convert to Islam just a few days ago? How many of us are even aware of these incidents taking place?

Nand Lal, the father of the teenager, who is a teacher at the Government Primary School Yarlund, Ghotki, along with his family members has taken shelter at Gurdwara, Lahore as he received threats from the local influential people.

While according to some reports Rinkle coverted to Islam of her own free will (now Faryal) Rinkle's family says, that a local leader is supporting the kidnappers and had pressurized the local magistrate to conclude with a decision in their favour, ignoring the plea in the written testimony of the kidnapped girl.

For many, it may be good news as a Hindu girl has 'embraced' Islam and has become an addition to the Ummah. Some may also believe that by getting her convert to Islam, one of them might get a berth booked in the Heaven as well, as it is generally perceived or believed.

Rinkle is not the only girl who has been a victim of such inhumane and unlawful treatment. There are 20 to 25 cases every month and around 300 cases per year. These young Hindu girls are abducted by influential people and converted to Islam against their will. Most of them take shelter in madrassas to avoid the backlash from society. In fact this is one of the main reasons that Hindus, particularly from upper Sindh, are migrating to India in bulk every year is because they are unable to bear the brunt and subsequent embarrassment in the society when their abducted daughters return as converts to Islam.

Except a certain section of media, these issues are hardly highlighted in mainstream media, the reason being the right-wing news policy of most of the media houses and growing commercialization.

Supreme Court Chief Justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry (who took suo moto notice on the confiscation of two bottles of alcohol from actress Atiqa Odho) seems to have no time to have take suo moto notice or even notice of the forcible conversion of young Hindu girls. The honorable chief justice often quotes in hearings, that corruption cases have brought a bad name to the country, but did the CJ even notice that forcible conversion and persecution of minorities also contribute to the country declining image.

Moreover, over two dozen legislators belonging to religious minority have not been able to make their voices heard regarding a remedy for the grievances of their community. The reason for their voices have reached deaf ears and continue to be ineffective can be found in a quote by a Hindu parliamentarian who stated, "We are selected members, not elected."

Though, I am an ardent supporter of democracy and democratic values, minorities in Pakistan were more secure during dictator, Pervez Mushrraf's term, than in this government in which Punjab Governor, Salman Taseer and Federal Minister for minorities, Shahbaz Bhatti, were killed.

In recent incidents like Rinkle Kumari and the case of three Hindus being murdered in broad daylight in Chak, Shikarpur, a few months back, the Sindhi nationalists have supported the Hindu community. In comparison, the members of the ruling PPP and other parties, only make hollow speeches. Those who have read the Constitution refer to Article 20, 25 and 39 in an effort to purport to their fellow parliamentarians that the minorities were enjoying equal rights, as stated in the constitution. But an issue that concerns the minority community most is that of forcible conversion of their youth and abduction for which there is no law.

So if there is no law addressing this issue is it okay for the issue to be overlooked?

Is there anybody drafting a law that will guarantee protection and freedom of religious belief?

The answer, unfortunately, is simply a 'no'.

I am a Hindu writer and cannot help but wonder if my words have any weight at all and if so then, would they be effective enough to initiate any substantial change? I hope so, but I believe not. There is a dire need to speak up by the so-called liberal and secular elite. Forget about Maya, Meera and Veena. Wake up and hear the unheard calls for help. Someone please speak up about Rinkle Kumari.

She is the one in need of attention.

Rinkle Kumari was Hindu last month – The Express Tribune Blog
 

Blackwater

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Twenty-three Hindus kidnapped from Balochistan: official


QUETTA: The incidents of kidnapping for ransom and other heinous crimes in Balochistan have been increased as the government official revealed that 23 members of the Hindu community were kidnapped from the province over a period of several months.

The rise in kidnapping had forced the Hindu community to migrate from Balochistan to other parts of the country.

Talking to DawnNews here on Saturday, Provincial Home Secretary Naseebullah Bazai said that 70 people were kidnapped from the Quetta Division alone during the last three months.

According to Bazai, 53 of the kidnapped had been recovered so far, while the others were yet to be traced.

He said an anti-kidnapping force had been formed to curb the incidents in the province.

On the political front, the Home Secretary revealed that cases against 83 politicians had been taken back after the introduction of the Balochistan package

"We are taking back these cases on the direction of the federal government," he said.


Twenty-three Hindus kidnapped from Balochistan: official | Provinces | DAWN.COM
 

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Pakistan – A nightmare for Hindus

Pakistan – A nightmare for Hindus

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Once again, the reports of exodus of religious minorities from Pakistan have come to light. This is not the first time that we are hearing about forced conversions, threats and intimidation of non-Muslim citizens in Pakistan. The cases date back to the country's inception.

In Pakistan, a country of over 175 million people, Muslims comprise approximately 95 percent of the population. The remaining belong to Pakistan's religious minorities, such as Christians, Hindus, Zikris, the Ahmadiyya, Sikhs, the Baha'i, Buddhists, Zoroastrians, the Mehdi Foundation and Jews.

A country, which has been failing miserably in the fight against terrorism, has proved to be a disappointment as far as protecting minorities is concerned. The vast majority of members of religious minorities, especially Hindus belonging to Balochistan and Sindh provinces, face sexual assault (including rape), threats, oppression and violence.

Of late, a Pakistani TV channel showed a Hindu boy converting to Islam during a program that was broadcast live before Iftar. The worst part was that the anchor was heard hailing the conversion. What message did the channel think it was sending out to the minority communities, who feel threatened all the time? This is reprehensible manifestation of attitude towards Hindus.

Another incident, wherein a 14-year-old Hindu girl gets kidnapped, converts to Islam and gets married to a Muslim, raises not just eyebrows but gives a glimpse of how minorities' rights are being persecuted in Pakistan.

As soon as reports emerged that 250 Hindus from Sindh and Balochistan sought to migrate on the pretext of travelling to India for a pilgrimage, Pakistan's Interior Minister Rehman Malik quickly claimed that the development was a conspiracy to denigrate his country. Really? The minister needs to have a look at the number of reports submitted by world organisations, telling the tale of minorities pleading for help.

Pakistan is a country where ministers have been assassinated for holding liberal views. What can we say about the situation of the hoi polloi belonging to the minority community in Pakistan? Undoubtedly, Pakistan is ranked amongst the worst states for minorities to reside in.

The worst part is that Pakistan's authorities have time and again failed to calm the concerns of the minority communities. Just statements won't do. Or an almost negligible political space would not help the community raise its voice.

David Pinault in his book `Notes from the Fortune-Telling Parrot: Islam and the Struggle for Religious Pluralism in Pakistan' deduced "systematic ideological warfare against Hindus in Pakistan". In fact, a report in 2006 drew attention towards the Islamisation process during Zia-ul-Haq's regime, which promoted religious bias against "backwards, superstitious" Hindus with the help of school curricula.

Ironically, on August 11, Pakistan celebrates Minorities' Day and on the same day this year, President Asif Ali Zardari has asked authorities in Sindh province to alleviate the sense of insecurity among the minority Hindus. It underscores Pakistan's failure in keeping its commitment to protect and promote minorities.

The President also pointed out that it was on August 11, 1947 when Pakistan's Father of the Nation, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, laid down the `foundations of a modern, tolerant and progressive Pakistan, where everyone would have equal rights regardless of creed, caste and gender`.

I also quote Mohammed Ali Jinnah as declaring in 1947: "You are free, free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other places of worship in this state of Pakistan. You may belong to any religion or caste or creed -- that has nothing to do with the business of the state."

Sounds like a joke now. The Pakistan that Jinnah had dreamt of has become a nightmare for Hindus.

http://zeenews.india.com/blog/38/blog853.html
 

Cliff@sea

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Re: Pakistan – A nightmare for Hindus

Hindu Girl Manisha Kumari Converted to Islam, Marries a Muslim



JACOBABAD (August 11, 2012): A Hindu girl, who disappeared two days ago, has reportedly converted to Islam and married a Muslim man in Jacobabad.


Reports have it that a erstwhile Hindu girl, Manisha Kumari, 14, now Mahvish, herself telephoned her parents from an unknown location and broke the news of her conversion, that she claimed was as voluntary as her love-marriage with a man named Ghulam Mustafa Channa.

On the other hand her father, Ravet Mal, has alleged that her abductors have forced her to convert and marry.

"She can never give up on her religion, she has been coerced into doing it", her father said while talking to Geo News.

According to her father she went missing a couple of days back and was nowhere to be found.

Girl's uncle, Sanjay Singh, told Geo News, from the way her voice wavered on the telephone, it appeared as if she was saying all this under pressure.

"She sounded scared on the phone, it's not what it seems, there were people around her dictating her, we could hear their giving her instructions", said Sanjay.

Meanwhile, vowing to recover her before long, SSP Jacobabad said that police were hot on trail of her alleged abductors.

Sindh has a sizeable population of Hindus, who are the largest minority community in Pakistan. (Geo News)


Hindu Girl Manisha Kumari Converted to Islam, Marries a Muslim - SIALTV
 

Cliff@sea

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Re: Pakistan – A nightmare for Hindus

 
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maomao

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Re: Pakistan – A nightmare for Hindus

Nothing can change in an Islamic country!!

Simple lesson - if you allow your country to be first secular and then it becomes islamic majority ----> Then pack your bags and run, if you can't fight back.....knowing how secular (aka dumb and coward) Hindus are --- this is the only way out for Hindus!!
 
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maomao

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maomao

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maomao

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maomao

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Re: Pakistan – A nightmare for Hindus

Run Hindu Run Mullah Ayaa!

P.S: Run to USA not Secular India which will soon be another hell hole for Hindus!
 

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maomao

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Re: Pakistan – A nightmare for Hindus


Brave Hindu girl at 24:03!!
 
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