Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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arun
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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X Posted.

Paul Marshall and Nina Shea, senior fellows at the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom writing in the Weekly Standard on the Islamic Republic of Pakistan’s obnoxious blasphemy law:
Blasphemy in Pakistan
Moderation is now a capital offense.

Jan 24, 2011, Vol. 16, No. 18 • By NINA SHEA and PAUL MARSHALL

Over the past 30 years, under Pakistan’s laws criminalizing blasphemy against Islam, hundreds of Christians, Ahmadis, Hindus, Sikhs, and unorthodox and reformist Muslims have been tried and imprisoned by the state or killed by extremists. …………………..

While most of those accused of blasphemy in Pakistan are Muslims, non-Muslim religious minorities suffer disproportionately: Though 5 percent of the population, they are half of those accused, and the testimony of one Muslim is sufficient to convict a non-Muslim. They also suffer increasing attacks by extremists. On August 1, 2009, after a Christian was accused of burning a Koran, a mob connected to the Taliban-linked Sipah-e-Sahaba attacked Christians in Korian and Gojra: They indiscriminately killed seven Christians, six of whom (including two children) were burned alive. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan reported that police knew of the intended attack but did nothing to prevent it. And while the government has so far not executed those convicted of blasphemy, dozens of accused people have been assassinated by fanatics, even when their cases ended in acquittal. ……………….

The Weekly Standard
JE Menon
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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>>While most of those accused of blasphemy in Pakistan are Muslims, non-Muslim religious minorities suffer disproportionately: Though 5 percent of the population, they are half of those accused,

If half of the accused are minorities, how come most accused are Muslims? GDM or have I missed something?
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by abhishek_sharma »

Brother of Potter star jailed for attacking her for dating Hindu

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/broth ... du/740698/
arun
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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With the unrelenting persecution that is the fate of the “Dhimmi” in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, it is inevitable that “Kaafir” Christians lacking in moral fibre would be intimidated into converting to the Mohammadden religion:

Some Christians in Pakistan convert fear into safety
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by arun »

In the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, self claimed haven for the Mohammaddens of the Indian Sub-Continent neither the “Islamic Republic” nor the “Safe haven for Mohammaddens” tag is sufficient for Mohammaddens belonging to the minority Shia / Shiite to escape the depredations of their co-religionists who have unleashed IED Mubarak variants of the IEDology of Pakistan against Shia / Shiite religious processions in Lahore and Karachi:

Lahore, Karachi hit: 16 killed, over 50 injured in two blasts
arun
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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In the Islamic Republic of Pakistan the cleansing of Dhimmi’s continues.

Hindu legislator of the Sindh Provincial Assembly flees to India fearing for his life in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

From the Pakistan Christian Post:

Hindu Member of Sindh Provincial Assembly flees to India for life safety
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Cashing in on Kids
“We have no political support nor affiliation with any tribe, and neither are we in a position to pay ransom. We are depending on the police to recover our child,” says a distraught Jaipal, father of Roshni, the four-year-old Hindu girl who was kidnapped on December 13 from Buxapur town in Kashmore district. This is not the first incident of its kind. Several children belonging to the Hindu community in upper Sindh have been kidnapped over the past several years.

At Kandhkot in Kashmore district an environment of insecurity prevails, especially among the Hindus who form a large segment of the population and mainly belong to the business community. In the last three years there have been about 23 cases of child kidnapping – seven of them were girls – registered by the police. Eleven of them, including three girls, belonged to the Hindu community. Almost all the children were recovered after paying ransom. The ages of a majority of these children ranged between three to 12 years.

Child kidnapping has become a lucrative business for professional criminals, many of whom are associated with notorious tribes and gangs. “Earlier, they were involved in petty theft and robbery. Now they have turned to abductions because abducting children is relatively easier and there is more money in it as the ransom amount is usually very high,” says Yar Muhammad Rind, SP investigations, Kashmore.

And fortunately for the kidnappers, after the recovery of an abducted child, the parents do not normally go in for litigation for fear of reprisals.

In the kidnappings in Kashmore, it was observed that the children were recovered within a week to three months. Interestingly, in all the cases, the police claimed to have recovered the children by conducting raids. But the truth is that in every instance the families secured their child’s release only after paying hefty sums to the kidnappers.

In most cases the Hindu community jointly pooled in the money to pay the ransom amount. In 2010 alone, Rs 11,50,000 was paid by the Hindu families living in Kandhkot by way of ransom to secure the release of several kidnapped Hindu children. Peer Chand (4 years) was freed for Rs 200,000; Peush Kumar (5 years) for Rs 330,000; Sagar Kumar (5 years) for Rs 170,000; Veeraj Kumar (7 years) for Rs 350,000; and Mahik Kumari (3 years) for Rs 100,000 respectively.

Five-year-old Dheeraj Kumar, a resident of Kandhkot, was the only child to be recovered without payment of any ransom. His kidnappers had earlier demanded 10 million rupees, but the victim belonged to a poor family – his father was a primary school teacher. “We made it clear that we would not pay a single penny and neither would we request the community for donations,” revealed Gianchand, an uncle of Dheeraj. Police intervention forced the abductors to surrender, thus securing the boy’s release without the transfer of any money.

Often the police know who the kidnappers are and once the pressure on them to recover a child mounts, they start to negotiate with the criminals. Shockingly, in certain cases the police have recovered the children by paying ransom at their own end. “The police has a network of informants and often the clues that they get through them help in identifying the kidnapper – but the problem is how to hunt them down. On occasions, the police are under tremendous political pressure not to pursue the culprits. But often the hideouts of the culprits are normally located in no-go or inaccessible areas,” says a former DPO of Kashmore District, on condition of anonymity.

The kidnappers have a mode of operation. Riding motor bikes, they wander around the area in the hope of picking children off the streets. Women, too, are used in the abductions. Most of the kidnapped children are trafficked to areas controlled by professional gangs belonging to various tribes in Sindh and Balochistan. These gangs have safe houses in Balochistan. “Militant groups from Balochistan are involved in the crimes in Sindh. Police have evidence to prove the involvement of militants living in the Dera Bugti and Sui areas,” says an IB (Intelligence Bureau) official, on condition of anonymity.

The police is not as well-equipped as the abductors, who are armed with the latest weapons. Consequently, they fail to nab them during search operations. In many cases, the police could not carry out an operation because it was virtually impossible to access certain areas. At least in one instance, DPO Salam Sheikh had to request the provincial government for help in conducting a raid to locate an abducted child – the police entered the village with the help of a helicopter.

According to police records, the district police in Kashmore, on average, arrested one to 10 persons in a single case. All the cases were tried in Anti-Terrorist Courts, but surprisingly not a single offender has been convicted since 2008. “Our job is to simply arrest the culprits; the courts decide on the punishments. Unfortunately, the offenders are set free after some time because the victim’s families fail to pursue the cases,” says SP Yar Mohammed. But, says Gianchand, “How can I accuse a person in court when I am not sure whether he’s involved in my child’s kidnapping or not?”

Many of the families do not have any faith in the police as it, too, has been found to be involved this dirty game. In fact, often police operations fail to recover the kidnappees because some criminals have been tipped off by an informant from among the police prior to the operation. “In the case of Dheeraj, the police would have recovered the boy in October, on the day when the kidnappers were negotiating with another party to sell him off in a remote village of the district. But the criminals slipped away moments before the arrival of the police because they had been tipped off,” says SP Yar Muhammad.

Alternately, besides fetching ransom, child kidnapping is, on occasion, being used to settle scores or challenge the writ of the police. Criminals use child kidnapping as a tool to discredit the police and manoeuvre the transfer of any officer who gives them a tough time on charges of “inefficient performance.” The same is used by influential tribal chieftains and politicians against the police. Frequent transfers of DPOs and postings of favourite officials has been rampant in the last three years.

Kidnappers also prefer to kidnap Hindu children, because it is generally believed that the media and civil society organisations, including some political parties, have been more responsive to the plight of the minorities. Hence there will be a greater hue and cry against the police. Hunger strikes, shutter-down strikes and rallies to protest child kidnappings have been gaining impetus in the district. Citizens are mobilising the public to exert pressure on the police administration by organising rallies against the widespread kidnappings of children from the Hindu community. On June 22, protests against the kidnapping of seven-year-old Peush Kumar were held in Kashmore, Sukkur and Badin. In a show of solidarity with the victim’s family, people blocked the Indus Highway to pressurise the police to recover the child. He was – but only after paying ransom.

Four-year-old Roshni has been missing since mid-December and every day the police consoles her parents with promises of her safe recovery. And despite the rapid increase in abductions, the existing political leadership has failed to take serious notice of it. Politicians have continued to pay lip service to the Hindu community, but not once has any tribal chieftain or elected representative taken a personal interest in the recovery of a child.

Following demonstrations and extensive media coverage, Ghalib Domki, a member of the Sindh Assembly from Buxapur, vowed that he would recover the girl very soon. “I know that my enemies are behind this kidnapping because they want to defame me,” says Domki. Whether the MPA from Sindh delivers on his promise remains to be seen.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Receiving threats in Pakistan, Hindu lawmaker resigns, moves to India
http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_re ... ia_1501121
SSridhar
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Reclaiming Jinnah's Pakistan - Editorial in Daily Times
On Saturday the resignation of a Hindu member of the Sindh Assembly, Ram Singh Sodho, after reportedly receiving threats is alarming. In 2008, Mr Sodho was elected on a Pakistan Muslim League-Functional (PML-F) reserved seat for minorities. Fearing for his life he submitted his resignation from India to the Speaker of the Sindh Assembly, Nisar Ahmad Khoro.

Historically, minorities — especially Hindus — in Sindh and Balochistan have been an integral part of society. Even during the time of partition when Punjab was witnessing some of the worst communal riots in the history of the subcontinent, Sindh and Balochistan were comparatively peaceful. Interior Sindh is abundant with prominent Hindu families that thrive economically and have been central to the province’s development. These families are also steeped in and maintain the indigenous heritage and culture of Sindh. However, the Sindh province and our country in general have seen a negative turn of events. Religious intolerance has been in the forefront ever since the Lal Masjid operation in 2007. No minority, irrespective of caste, creed or religious beliefs, is safe. Reports in the media also state that 400 to 500 Pakistani Hindu families fearing for their lives are trying to obtain Indian citizenship. With attacks on Shias, Ahmedis, Christians and now Hindus becoming a daily occurrence, the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) government, which champions itself as the defender of minority rights, must deliver.

Although Article 25 (1) of the Constitution of Pakistan says that “all citizens are equal before law and are entitled to equal protection of law”, the reality is quite the opposite. Successive governments have failed to legislate and provide sufficient mechanisms for protecting minorities. The blame is even greater on the governments during the 1970s and 80s for promulgating laws that ostracised minorities. Minority groups rightly raise questions as to the fulfilment of the promise made before partition for the integration as full and equal citizens of minorities in Pakistani society.

Due to the extremism that has crept into society, we have become increasingly intolerant. The greatest example of this is the assassination of Shaheed Salmaan Taseer for his stance on the right of a Christian woman to justice. Only now can we start to fully understand what he was trying to do. Quaid-e-Azam envisaged a progressive, democratic and tolerant Pakistan. The time has come to revisit and recover it.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Spero News article on the target killings and kidnapping of Hindu’s in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. The horrible fate of Dhimmi’s in an Islamic Republic and Ideological Muslim State is once again highlighted:

Pakistan: Islamists set their sights on Hindu minority
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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X Posted from the "Baluchistan: The Story of Another Pakistan Military Genocide" thread.

The freedom loving people of Balochistan are in no mood to meekly accept the genocide launched against them by Punjabi’s of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

Protests over the extra-judicial killing of Baloch’s observed:

Shutter-down strike in Balochistan
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by jagga »

Pak's Hindu temples turned into picnic spots, hotels
Hindus in Pakistan are watching helplessly as ancient temples turn into ruins
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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joshvajohn
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Pakistan's Minorities Minister Bhatti Is Killed in Gun Attack in Islamabad
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-0 ... mabad.html
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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^^^ AOL News, citing the BBC, is reporting that the Roman Catholic Christian Minorities Affairs Minister of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Shahbaz Bhatti, was killed by Islamic Terrorists as they believed the Minister had blasphemed:
Christian Pakistani Politician Slain; Islamists Claim Responsibility

Mar 2, 2011 – 8:07 AM ……………………..

Police chief Wajid Durrani told the BBC that the assassins, who escaped in a white Suzuki, left pamphlets by al-Qaida and Tehrik-i-TalibanPunjab -- a branch of the Taliban in Pakistan's most populous province -- at the murder scene. Tehrik-i-Taliban told BBC Urdu that the group was responsible for the hit.

"This man was a known blasphemer of the Prophet [Muhammad]," said the group's deputy spokesman, Ahsanullah Ahsan. "We will continue to target all those who speak against the law which punishes those who insult the prophet. Their fate will be the same." ………………

AOL
The cited BBC article is available here:

Pakistan Minorities Minister Shahbaz Bhatti shot dead
arun
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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X Posted:
menon s wrote:No Country for Good Men.

http://newsweekpakistan.com/scope/260

The contents of the pamphlet left by Shabaz Bhattis killers.
"This is a warning from the warriors of Islam to all the world's infidels, Crusaders, Jews and their operatives within the Muslim brotherhood," it reads, "especially the head of Pakistan's infidel system, [President Asif Ali] Zardari, his ministers, and all the institutions of this evil system." This document from the Punjabi Taliban continues: "In your fight against Allah, you have become so bold that you act in favor of and support those who insult the Prophet. And you put a cursed Christian infidel Shahbaz Bhatti in charge of [the blasphemy laws review] committee. This is the fate of that cursed man. And now, with the grace of Allah, the warriors of Islam will pick you out one by one and send you to hell, God willing."
arun
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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The Government of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan seems to have paved the way for the killing of the Christian Minorities Affairs Minister Shahbaz Bhatti by Islamic Terrorists by withholding adequate security arrangements.

Dawn reports the late Minister was not provided with a bullet proof car nor on the day of his assassination escorted by a security detail despite the late Minister requesting the same:

Minority minister and the missing security

The fact that the now dead Minister was faced with a clear and present danger to his life from Islamic Terrorists was not exactly a big secret as Jang reports:

Jang had warned of plot against Bhatti twice

In the Islamic Republic of Pakistan the fate of an individual belonging to a religion other than Islam and thus being a “Dhimmi” is a horrible one.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Pakistan's Christians Mourn, and Fear for Their Future

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/ ... z1FzoFimdR
"Today, I want to address Muhammad Ali Jinnah," Asiya Nasir, a Christian lawmaker told parliament, pointing accusingly at the portrait of the country's founder. "You told us to come here and make a home with you. When the Gojra tragedy happened, I said that our future generations will ask us if we regret coming here. Now, we are filled with regret."

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/ ... z1FzoWif2A
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by Vikas »

Did Asiya Nasir or her family migrate from India to Pakistan because Jinnah called?
I don't think except for Muslims, anyone from India migrated to What was to be Pakistan. This is being disingenuous on her part.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by JE Menon »

They probably stayed... a major folly.

Meanwhile, my strong sense is that Bhatti belonged to some Evangelical sect of Christianity. This probably explains, to some degree, the robustness of the response coming from the US.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by joshvajohn »

Bhatti Killing Should Alarm Pakistan's Minorities
http://www.rferl.org/content/feature/2330606.html

Mystery behind Shahbaz Bhatti murder
http://pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=79492

ISI is responsible for terror. ISI should be announced as a terror supporting or sponsoring agency and should be dismantled.
ISI promotes a hatred attitude towards all other religious folks. They have a department to do this. ISI also want to do engage through their terror agencies in order to get world attention to them and world would beg for investigation and thus money will flow into Pakistan. ISI terror tactics by providing information about the minorities along with the forward attack of extremists will make Pakistan unlivable to Hindus and other minorities. Now Christians are migrating due to fear and also the Hindus. It is essential those countries who provide money and support to Pakistan government, military and particularly ISI should be seen as those who support terrorising their own minorities in their countries. Unless there is an international pressure no one in Pakistan would bother about killing, eliminating and driving the minorities away from Pakistan. Every dollar that any country would give to Pakistan is to support such terrorising of minorities. Unless there are enough pressure what is the need for giving money to these guys who buys guns from the Western charity money and kills minorities in their country. THe government is not serious about it at all.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Ancient Durga temple being destroyed in Pakistan
The demolition of Hindu temples in Pakistan for the construction of parks, schools etc is a common phenomenon in Pakistan.

In the latest such incident, some contractors have started digging granite stones at the base of a hill, on top of which a historical temple of Durga Mata is located, in Sindh district. Despite opposition by local Hindus, the digging work is going ahead and the temple may be completely demolished within a month.

The ancient temple is located on top of a hill in Nagarparkar in Tharparkar district of Sindh. A number of Hindu and Jain temples are located in Nagarparkar and its surrounding areas. Most of them date back to 2,000 to 2,500 years.

Instead of trying to put a stop to the digging activity, the Sindh government has issued a lease to a contractor to carry out the work.

Veerjhi Kohli, caretaker of the temple, told rediff.com, "The way the work of blasting is going on, the temple will be demolished within a month. The hill (on which the temple is located) is going to be dug up from all sides, how will the temple survive? The demolition of the temple shows how helpless Hindus living in Pakistan are."

Veerjhi added, "Some two lakh pilgrims visited the Durga Mata temple during Shivratri. The pilgrims had protested the destruction and urged the government to stop the work, but to no avail. The work was halted during the festival but now it has resumed again."

The Pakistani media also doesn't highlight the destruction of temples, laments Veerjhi, adding that it doesn't focus on the plight of Hindus in the country.

"Neither any TV channel nor any leading newspaper reported our protests. After such incidents, we Hindus feel alienated in Pakistan," he told rediff.com.

Hindu activists have approached local political figures and other concerned authorities but none of them have offered to help. "We were shocked by the district coordination officer's remark, who said the temple was safe and there was no risk to it from the digging," Veerjhi said.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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No room for 'the other'
When Nazir Bhatti hit the streets on February 13, 1997 to take part in a peaceful procession, he wasn’t prepared for the backlash. Just a week earlier, in the village of Shanti Nagar in the Punjab, thousands of angry Muslims descended on the mostly Christian community chanting slogans and carrying rifles, daggers, sticks, and hand-made bombs – their blood was boiling over allegations that a Quran was found ripped to pieces and that Christian names were spotted scrawled over some of the pages. The punishment they meted out was brutal: churches were razed, Bibles were burned, over 700 houses were destroyed and 2,500 locals had to flee.

Around the country, people were horrified. In Karachi, Bhatti led a protest march involving over 1,000 people. It wasn’t long before things turned ugly. Police tossed tear gas and fired shots into the crowd, accusing protesters of attacking first. One person was killed and three injured.

As a leader of the procession, and someone who had stood in the general elections earlier that month, Bhatti was singled out by police. “Twenty-one false cases were filed against me in two hours,” says Bhatti. Murder and blasphemy were among the charges. “The police launched FIRs against 383 people that night.”

He spent the next year in hiding in Lahore and Islamabad. He tried to wait it out, hoping that the cases would be withdrawn. Fighting them wasn’t an option. “Getting bail for 21 serious charges would have been next to impossible.” In 1998, he fled Pakistan. He’s been in the US ever since.

More than 12 years later, religious minorities in Pakistan continue to be treated as second- and third-rate citizens. Each year there are hundreds of incidents involving threats, violence, fabricated allegations of blasphemy, mob ‘justice,’ forced conversions and land-grabbing that target minorities. From his home on the US east coast, Bhatti, who is the editor of the Pakistan Christian Post, says that most people in the Pakistani Christian ex-pat community in Philadelphia have faced threats and violence, including kidnapping and allegations of blasphemy.

Among those in the community is a former elected MPA from Punjab who fled with her husband after publicly speaking out against discrimination. “Many of those who have left do not like to talk about their stories to the press. They fear retaliation against their families and relatives back home.” Thousands of miles away and years later, minorities still fear the culture and systems that rule Pakistan.

Of course, Christians are not the only persecuted community in Pakistan. Hindus, Sikhs and Ahmedis are all threatened and vilified in what the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) calls “an xenophobic atmosphere created and promoted by conservative clerics and a section of the media.” Minorities are often placed at the centre of conspiracies against Pakistan and Islam. “They cannot freely practice their religion and present their point of view without risking their life, honour and property, as is evident from attacks on them.”

And violent attacks seem to be on the rise. “The year 2009 was one of the worst for Ahmedis in Pakistan from a human rights perspective,” said the HRCP in their last annual report on the status of Ahmedis. “Eleven Ahmedis were murdered for their faith. Since the promulgation of the anti-Ahmadiyya law in 1984, there was never a year when more than 11 Ahmedis were killed.”

No one could have guessed how much worse things were about to become in so little time. Eighty-six Ahmedis were killed and 124 injured as worshippers gathered for prayers on a Friday in late May in Lahore. The co-ordinated attacks were the worst to hit the Ahmedi community. “More people were killed in a single day than in the past 16 years put together,” reported the HRCP. This says a lot, since the persecution of Ahmedis has been constant over the years. In 1974, Ahmedis were declared non-Muslims and a decade later, General Zia-ul-Haq promulgated Ordinance XX that basically criminalised Ahmedi worship.

The recent Ahmedi tragedy in Lahore on May 28, focused more global attention on Pakistan. And while international condemnation of the attacks was swift and severe, outsiders had already been monitoring the plight of minorities in Pakistan with concern. In the latest Annual Report of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, which covers the one-year period up to March 31, 2010, the government-funded organisation recommended that “the State Department designate five additional ‘countries of particular concern’ (CPCs)” for egregious violations of religious freedom; Pakistan was one of them, along with Iraq, Nigeria, Turkmenistan and Vietnam. The US State Department already has eight countries on their list of CPCs: Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Uzbekistan.

The report states, “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.”

Those “positive actions” referred to include the creation of a distinct federal minister for minorities and giving the post a cabinet rank. The post was given to MNA Shahbaz Bhatti, who has said he is working towards making revisions to the blasphemy laws.

“We are making changes and amendments in these laws so that these laws cannot be misused, [including to] create insecurity among minorities. We are in the process of consultation, and after consulting with all the stakeholders, such as political parties, Islamic religious scholars and Ulema, and representatives of minorities, we will table a bill in the parliament.”

But revisions to discriminatory legislation are unlikely to be enough in an environment where intolerance and mob violence rule.

In fact, society has become more intolerant than before, says I. A. Rehman, Secretary-General of the HRCP. Worse still, clerics and even some judges have consistently propagated the view that people have a right to kill blasphemers, he says. {This is what most of those people who want to normalize relations with Pakistan, do not understand. The society there is a goner. It cannot be retrieved. Any attempts by India to normalize relations will be misconstrued as Indian weakness and cause us only more harm} “The government is unable to stop such violence as its functionaries have been infected by the virus of intolerance and the government is afraid of the conservative population’s backlash.

In Punjab, there is serious concern that the provincial government is septic with extremist sympathisers. Reports of Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah rubbing shoulders with Maulana Muhammad Ahmed Ludhianvi, the leader of Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), a banned organisation, at an election rally, do no wonders for the credibility of the PML-N administration in Punjab. There even were reports of MPA Sanaullah visiting the group’s madrassa. Besides being anti-Shia, the SSP was accused by Minister for Minorities Bhatti of being behind the Gojra attacks that targeted Christians in 2009.

Moreover, the Punjab government openly promotes the political and economic ostracisation of the Ahmedi community. Government land auctions purposefully exclude Ahmedis, even in Rabwah, the headquarters of their community since 1948 and a place where they should feel secure. During an auction this year, authorities refused to sell land to any buyer that did not certify that they believed in the Khatme Nabuwwat (Finality of the Prophethood). Buyers also had to undertake that they “would never resell it ever to Ahmedis.” Further, according to the HRCP, the DCO Chiniot, in a letter dated May 10, 2010, and under pressure from Muslim clerics in the area, pushed for barring Ahmedis from a land auction because “the Qadianis being rich in land will buy the land, and Muslim occupants who are at present in occupation of the land will be ousted. This will result in the strengthening of Qadianis in Chenab Nagar (Rabwah).” {These tactics are exactly like those of the Third Reich against the Jews}

In fact, there seems to be a concerted effort to weaken the Ahmedi community and non-Sunni sects. The federal government decided recently that it would appoint conservative cleric Mohammad Khan Sheerani to head the Council of Islamic Ideology (CII), a non-political, non-partisan governmental body that advises lawmakers and the executive on Islamic law. The problem is that the appointee is a member of the JUI-F from Balochistan. Rights groups, including the Women’s Action Forum (WAF), have expressed their concerns over the decision. Dawn reports, “WAF said the stewardship of the CII in the hands of religio-political parties would negate any gains Pakistani society has made, and ensure that civil society groups remain enmeshed in defending the status quo instead of catalysing progressive changes.” Moreover, the move would take the top position away from a moderate cleric and put it in the hands of a conservative. The JUI-F is a Deobandi group.

And in April, using public funds, the Punjab government sponsored and held an “end of the Prophethood” conference at Badshahi mosque in Lahore. At the event clerics and participants burnt an effigy of the founder of the Ahmedi community and “unrestrainedly proposed the denial of religious freedom to Ahmedis,” reported the HRCP.

In Rabwah, Ahmedis have seen conservative forces being pushed into the community for some time. In 2006 the HRCP reported that certain groups were facilitated by the government “to hold the most provocative and slanderous anti-Ahmedi conferences at Rabwah,” the headquarters of the Ahmedis. “Aalmi Majlis Khatme Nabuwwat is based in Multan and Lahore, but they now hold their big annual meeting at Rabwah. Every year the authorities allow such three or four major events at Rabwah. Participants are often a serious threat to peace . . . .” There were also allegations that extremist anti-Ahmedi clerics were being installed in mosques in the area.

After the May attacks in Lahore, it is unclear how the investigation is proceeding and what kind of justice will be meted out to the perpetrators of the crime. The Gojra incident doesn’t set a good precedent, though.

Last year on August 1, Muslim extremists besieged a Christian neighbourhood in Gojra, an area of Toba Tek Singh in Punjab. Houses were looted and burned. Eight people were killed. The riots were sparked by allegations of blasphemy against a Christian man, Talib Masih, who was accused of tearing pages of the Quran and using the paper in celebrations at a mehndi party for his son on July 25: the paper was mixed with rupee notes and tossed at the groom. Attacks against the Christian community started in Korian, Talib Masih’s village, on July 30 and they spread to Gojra two days later.

The Gojra attacks are a classic example of how locals take the law into their own hands. A group of Muslims first tried to haul Masih in front of a Panchayat and get him to admit to his crime. He wouldn’t. So they beat him up and that evening they ransacked Korian. Soon announcements were blaring over the loudspeakers of mosques in villages across the area. Local Muslims were riled up and told to punish the blasphemers.

A judicial inquiry headed by Lahore High Court Judge Iqbal Hameedur Rehman was completed in September 2009. The report, which has yet to be made fully public, recommends that those responsible for “commission and omission” be held accountable. The report also proposes amendments to Pakistan Penal Code sections associated with anti-blasphemy laws, including section 295 all the way through to section 298, which lists the anti-Ahmedi laws.{Justice Hameedur Rehman must now be a marked man after the assassinations of Taseer & Shahbaz Bhatti}

According to a Daily Times report, “The tribunal reached the conclusion that the riots were a result of the ‘inability of law-enforcement agencies to assess the gravity of the situation, inadequate precautionary and preventative measures taken by law-enforcement agencies, a lukewarm stance by the Toba Tek Singh DPO, the failure of intelligence agencies in providing prompt and correct information, a defective security plan, the irresponsible behaviour of the administration, the complete failure of police while discharging their duties, the non-enforcement of Section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code, omissions to take steps under sections 107 and 151 of the CrPC, the lack of a decision to invoke the Punjab Maintenance of Public Order (MPO) 1960 – which amounts to letting the miscreants loose to wreak havoc during the course of the riots – and several other factors.’”

An HRCP fact-finding mission that took place prior to the judicial review found that “no desecration of the Holy Quran took place in Korianwala village.” The HRCP team wrote that “though claims were made that desecration of the Holy Quran allegedly occurred in Korianwala on July 25, no case had been registered until 9:45 PM on July 30, shortly after a Muslim mob had attacked and torched Christians’ houses in the village. A number of accounts suggest that the Muslim mob attacked Christians’ houses and a case for defiling of the Holy Quran was lodged only after some Panchayat members who had been blackmailing Talib for money realised that he was either unwilling or unable to pay them any money.”

Eleven months later, after the HRCP report, the judicial inquiry and plenty of time for police investigations, the victims of the crime have seen no justice. Under the anti-terrorism act, charges were laid against at least 17 people, including police officials, but no one has been convicted. A member of the HRCP fact-finding team, Mehboob Khan, informed Newsline that all the accused are out on bail, but the charges still stand.

It is not surprising that the Punjab government has received criticism over the handling of the Gojra incident.

On May 11, the Lahore High Court directed the provincial government to immediately withdraw the appointment of DIG Ahmad Raza Tahir as Lahore capital city police officer. In Justice Iqbal Hameedur Rehman’s inquiry, Tahir, who was a Faisalabad regional police officer at the time of the attacks, was blamed for his failure in controlling the riots.

In so many cases over the years, police officers have not only been accused of failing to do their duties in instances where political and religious leaders try to rouse crowds into a frenzy but also been accused of participating in the rioting.

Meanwhile, back in Philadelphia, Nazir Bhatti says things are getting worse in Pakistan. “The government is doing nothing. They always say they are protecting minorities, but there are always more blasphemy cases being registered against innocent Christians.” And it is not just trumped-up charges of blasphemy. “There are many cases of forcible conversions in upper Punjab. And it is not just Christians. They are doing the same to Hindus too.”

Dr Ramesh Kumar Vankwani, a patron and founder of the Pakistan Hindu Council, says forced conversions are a big problem. “We filed a constitutional petition on forced conversions in the Supreme Court three years ago, but till now we have received no response,” he says. There seems to be little legal protection for minority communities when it comes to forced conversions. Girls are kidnapped for 15 to 20 days, says Dr Vankwani, and during that time, under duress, they are converted and are married. “Often they are told, ‘Accept Islam and you will be released.’”

Later, when they are allowed to meet their families, the girl is asked to give a statement about how she converted willfully. “Usually, when a girl gives her statement, she is crying,” says Dr Vankwani. “How can she give a free statement when in the custody of her kidnappers?” Only when they are alone, and not under immediate threat from their new ‘families’ do many of these girls find the courage to disclose what really happened. Sadly, the families of victims are also often too scared to register cases against the perpetrators in the face of retribution.

Hindus are susceptible to kidnappings across the nation. In Battagram in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, where a small community of Hindu families has lived in peace for generations, threats of violence have been reported. The head of the small Battagram Hindu community was given a choice by the Taliban: pay Jizya (a minority tax) or be abducted, or worse, killed.

The Sikh community in the northwest has not been immune either. Hundreds of Sikh families living in Orakzai Agency have been approached by the Taliban to pay a protection tax, sometimes in the millions of rupees. Some paid, others didn’t. Some Sikhs chose to flee instead. In April 2009, a few unlucky ones who delayed their departure and missed a payment deadline had to watch as the Taliban responded by razing their homes.

Across Pakistan religious minorities are persecuted in many ways. A lack of tolerance and an unfair legal system create a situation where the cards are stacked against them. Bishop Ijaz Inayat of the Holy Trinity Church in Karachi was an outspoken critic of the Gojra riots. In fact, he is an outspoken critic of the state of the nation. “The population is not educated,” he says. “The majority of the people do not know a lot about Islam. As a result they are exploited by certain groups to maintain a crisis situation.” They are fed lies, he says. “They are told that killing an Ahmedi is jannat ki chabi.”

But he is hopeful that changes can come. “There needs to be a national policy,” he says, “a clear-cut policy.” He says it would involve both the government and the media. “The masses need to be educated that all human beings are equal. They need to know that this is an human issue rather than a religious one.”

Of course, with the constant misuse of the blasphemy law, it is also a legal one. The HRCP in its 2009 annual report on the state of human rights says clearly why the blasphemy laws should be repealed and why simple revisions won’t suffice: “Allegations of blasphemy or defiling of religious scriptures, irrespective of their veracity, do not warrant vigilante attacks. Nor do they absolve the government of its primary duty to protect all citizens. Effective prosecution of offenders would serve as a deterrent to future attacks, while a lack of it would encourage impunity. The federal government must take action to ensure that laws on the statute books are not abused to harass or ostracise citizens.”
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Christian Woman Freed from Muslim Kidnappers in Pakistan
A Christian mother of seven here who last August was kidnapped, raped, sold into marriage and threatened with death if she did not convert to Islam was freed this week.

After she refused to convert and accept the marriage, human traffickers had threatened to kill Shaheen Bibi, 40, and throw her body into the Sindh River if her father, Manna Masih, did not pay a ransom of 100,000 rupees (US$1,170) by Saturday (March 5), the released woman told Compass.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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X-posting relevant excerpts from arun's post in IWT thread.
Pakistan's Jewish Problem
I. Brief Historical Background: The Jews and Pakistan

There is a long-held view that the Pashtun tribes, who inhabit the Afghanistan-Pakistan border region, are one of the 10 lost tribes of Israel. Navraas Aafreedi, a Pashtun academic at Lucknow University in northern India, told a newspaper in January 2010: "Pathans, or Pashtuns, are the only people in the world whose probable descent from the lost tribes of Israel finds mention in a number of texts from the 10th century to the present day, written by Jewish, Christian and Muslim scholars alike, both religious as well as secularists."[1] However, attempts by anthropologists to establish a definitive Jewish link to the Pashtun tribes have been unsuccessful.

Nevertheless, historical records indicate that Jews, with no connection to the Pashtuns, have lived in Pakistan and the wider South Asian region over the past several centuries. A 2007 report in the Pakistani daily Dawn noted: "The earliest graves... [of Jews in Karachi] are from 1812 and 1814, with a vast majority from the 1950s."[2] The report also cited Aitken's Gazetteer of the Province of Sind, a British-era government document which was published from Karachi in 1907, as recording that "there were only 428 Jews enumerated in the census of 1901, and these were really all in Karachi. Many belonged to the Bene Israel community who observed Sephardic Jewish rites and are believed to have settled in India [which included Pakistan] shortly after the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus [the Roman Emperor in 69 AD]."[3]

The Dawn report added: "Other research documents record about 2,500 Jews in Karachi, with about 100 in Peshawar at the beginning of the 20th century. At the time of [Pakistan's] independence [in 1947], many Jews migrated to India, but about 2,000 stayed in Pakistan. Their first real exodus occurred soon after the creation of Israel, which triggered many incidents of violence against Jews, and the Karachi synagogue became a site of anti-Israel demonstrations."[4]

In the late 19th century, one of Karachi's notables was Soloman David, who died in March 1902. He was a surveyor of the Karachi municipality and built the Magain Shalom synagogue in Karachi. His gravestone reads: "The widely known and highly respected Soloman David always sought the welfare of the Jewish community and through his liberality erected at his own expense a handsome synagogue, Magain Shalome [sic]."[5]

Another report estimated the Jewish population of Karachi at 2,500 prior to August 14-15, 1947 when Pakistan was created.[6]

After Pakistan's creation as an Islamic nation, relations between the Jews and their Muslims neighbors began to deteriorate. This strain in Jewish-Muslim relations also resulted from Muslim protests in Pakistan against the newly created State of Israel. Some Pakistani Jews migrated to India and the U.K., and others to Israel. In early 2010, a Pakistani daily carried this first-person observation of anti-Jewish violence in the newly created Islamic nation of Pakistan: "The synagogue in Karachi was set on fire, and several Jews were attacked. The frequency of attacks increased after each of the Arab-Israeli wars, i.e. 1948, 1956 and 1967."[7] {See, such a report appeared only in 2010 many decades after the incident}

In 2008, a Karachi resident reminisced about the Jews of Karachi in a conversation with Pakistani journalist Syed Intikhab Ali: "[The Jews] were peaceful people having limited relations with local people and used to keep a distance from political activities. When [the] Arab-Israel war broke out in late sixties, they were isolated and started migrating silently and only a few Jewish people [were] left in the city."[8]

From various accounts, it appears that some Jews might be living in Pakistan even now, possibly by hiding their religious identity lest it may not be possible for them to move to Israel due to absence of diplomatic ties between the two countries.

Although there is no notable Jewish presence in Pakistan now, the anti-Jewish and anti-Israel protests in Pakistan have taken on an ideological nature, with religious and political leaders blaming Jews/Israel, Christians/the West/U.S., and Hindus/India as the cause of almost all of their problems. By 2010, it could be said that not a week passed in Pakistan without a religious leader, a columnist, or a politician issuing a statement against Israel and the Jewish people, blaming them as well as the United States and India for one or another of the problems facing Pakistan. Although not all criticism of Israel can be described as antisemitic, it does not appear that the Pakistani leaders in their own minds see subtle differences between their hateful ideological sloganeering against the Jews and possibly justified criticism of Israel's policies.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by arun »

In the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, self claimed haven for the Mohammaddens of the Indian Sub-Continent neither the “Islamic Republic” nor the “Safe haven for Mohammaddens” tag is sufficient for Mohammaddens belonging to the minority Shia / Shiite to escape the depredations of their co-religionists.

“Sectarian Incident” in Hangu results in 11 Shia’s travelling from Parachinar to Peshawar being killed:
11 die in attack on Parachinar coach

By Abdul Sami Paracha

KOHAT, March 13: Militants intercepted a passenger coach in Mamo Khwar area of Hangu district on Sunday and opened fire, killing 11 passengers and injuring six others.

The Peshawar-bound coach was coming from Parachinar.

Nine of the people killed in what appeared to be a sectarian attack were identified as ……………………..

“It seems to be a sectarian incident, as all those killed in the firing were Shias,” senior local police official Abdul Rashid said. …………………..

Dawn
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Christian’s death ‘not due to natural causes’ http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.as ... 011_pg7_31
LAHORE: A Christian convicted of blasphemy has died in mysterious circumstances in a jail in Karachi.

Qamar David was serving a life sentence in Karachi’s central jail for committing blasphemy.

Officials say he died of a heart attack but his family say that as a fit and healthy man, this is unlikely be true. “My client was in perfect condition the last time I met him,” Qamar David’s lawyer Pervez Chaudhry told the BBC. Officials say that David was being held in a Christians-only part of the jail

“I have spoken to the family and we don’t believe he died a natural death. “He had been receiving threats against his life. “I had submitted an application in this regard in court - my client had also mentioned that prison officials were involved.” Mr Chaudhry’s arguments have been backed up by the dead man’s family. “I visited him quite regularly and he had never complained of any illness,” Shahid Sagar, David’s cousin, told the BBC. “He was certainly not in the kind of condition that would make him drop dead all of a sudden. I can’t accept this report of him dying of a heart attack.” But prison officials are adamant that David died of natural causes.

“There is no question about it - he died of natural causes,” Sindh Inspector General of Prisons Ghulam Qadir Thebo said. Mr Thebo said that the dead man was lodged in a Christians-only wing - so there was no question of him being targeted by Muslim prisoners.

“Our investigations have not yielded any evidence of foul play,” Thebo said. “There is no evidence to suggest he was murdered.”
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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Seven Ahmadi families migrate from KP http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.as ... 011_pg7_13
PESHAWAR: Around seven families from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) have migrated to other provinces in the wake of the worsening law and order situation of the province.

Sources say the migration took place from Peshawar, Mardan and Kohat. Recently, attacks on Ahmadi families have increased in KP. Last year, an advocate was abducted from the limits of Pishtakhara police station, following a murder of a businessman in Mardan, also an attack on members of the Ahmadi community in Kohat.

Official sources say that around 10,000 Ahmadis live in KP. “The names of those who migrated cannot be given due to security reasons, but this year some of them have migrated after selling their properties,” an official of the Home Department said. Members of the Ahmadi community in Peshawar say they have been under “enormous threat”. “Our children are no longer secure, we cannot express our opinions openly and we do not even feel secure in our neighbourhoods anymore,” an Ahmadi residing in Hayatabad told Daily Times.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by arun »

In the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, self claimed haven for the Mohammaddens of the Indian Sub-Continent neither the “Islamic Republic” nor the “Safe haven for Mohammaddens” tag is sufficient for Mohammaddens belonging to the minority Shia / Shiite to escape the depredations of their co-religionists of the Sunni Sect.

A case of “suspected sectarian violence“ in Kurram results in 13 Shia’s being killed:

Gunmen kill 13 in ambush of Pakistan Shiites

Earlier on 13 March, 11 Shia’s were killed in Hangu in a similar sectarian attack:

Clicky
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by arun »

X Posted from the “Baluchistan : The Story of Another Pakistan Military Genocide” thread.

Extrajudicial killings by organs of the Punjabi dominated Security Forces of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan targeting the Baloch / Baluch ethnic minority continues notwithstanding the connecting thread of the shared Mohammadden religion.

One hopes that the Baloch will not be cowed down by the genocidal tactics of the Punjabi dominated Security Forces of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan continue their just struggle for freedom for Balochistan from thie rapacious Punjabi grasp:

Eight bodies found in Balochistan
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by ManishH »

^^^Appearances of mutilated bodies is a regular trend in Baluchistan.

Pakistan's secret dirty war
Balochistan's dirty little war ... highlights a very fundamental danger – the ability of Pakistanis to live together in a country that, under its Islamic cloak, is a patchwork of ethnicities and cultures.
It'll be good if India can goad Iran into "expressing outrage" everytime these extrajudicial killings happen. Iran must be tempted into "Greater Baluchistan" or "East Sistan" kind of ambitions. All this while silently doing it's work on the ground.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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More Misery in Kurram
It had taken the Talib terrorist Nek Muhammad Wazir one day to renege on his April 2004 Shakai Treaty with the Pakistan Army. The September 2006 Miranshah Agreement between the Pakistani state and the warlords in North Waziristan lasted 10 months before the militants repudiated the deal in July 2007. The March 2007 deal between the government and the Taliban in Bajaur Agency was literally a nonstarter but was really dead by August of 2007. Then came the mother of all deals when, in May 2008, the Pakistani state inked the agreement with the murderous hordes of Mullah Fazlullah in Swat. While the people of Malakand knew from the word go that the Pakistani state had merely capitulated and there was no ‘agreement’ as such, the deal officially fell apart in April 2009.

And here we are again: yet another peace agreement with the murderers lies in tatters on the Thall-Parachinar road. The peace accord between the various tribes of the Kurram Agency, held under the auspices of Khalil Haqqani of the Haqqani terrorist network, Pakistan’s Federal Interior Minister Rehman Malik and, of course, the best-in-the-world intelligence agency, :) took less than two months to unravel.

On March 25, 2011, three minibuses were on their way from Peshawar to Parachinar in the Upper Kurram Agency when they came under attack from terrorists who opened fire on the first vehicle. First, three men were asked to disembark and were then shot dead on the roadside. The terrorists boarded the vehicle and shot 10 others at point-blank range. The following two (three according to media reports) minibuses stopped as the driver of the lead vehicle panicked and attempted to leave. Forty-five passengers (the exact number remains unknown) were taken hostage by the gunmen. By one account, these hapless people were taken to North Waziristan. The terrorists then released 13 or 15 women and children, who were subsequently driven in a pickup vehicle to the FC fort in Thall. The majority of these men, women and children belong to the Shia Toori tribe.

The Toori convoy had entered Kurram Agency from the Chapari checkpost through the Thall tehsil of Hangu district. The Baggan area where the attack and abductions took place is about three miles from the Chapari checkpost inside Kurram Agency. It is pertinent to note that Baggan has remained a hotbed of Taliban activity and a source of revenue for the militants, sending monetary proceeds from the village fairs to Taliban groups in the Orakzai Agency next door.

The MNA from Upper Kurram, Sajid Toori, has held the government and security forces responsible for the attack, and rightly so. The peace deal notwithstanding, it is perplexing, to say the least, that the government agencies would not escort a convoy that was a potential target for the terrorists, especially at night, when this particular attack happened. This is not the first time that the Toori tribesmen have come under attack after the February 3, 2011 peace deal. A few weeks ago, armed men from North Waziristan kidnapped 20 Shia residents of Kurram, whose whereabouts remain unknown to date.

Sajid Toori is not that off the mark in his claim because this would not be the first time that the people of Upper Kurram have been targeted on the Pakistan Army’s watch. In January this year, a convoy of 24 trucks carrying food supplies, medicines and provisions for Upper Kurram was looted and then torched near the village Durrani, near Sadda in Lower Kurram. The Kurramis hold a Colonel Sajjad responsible for this attack on the convoy, which, ostensibly, was under the protection of the Kurram militia, to bring them to the negotiating table with the Taliban-Haqqani network.

While no militant group has taken responsibility for the present attack as yet, fingers are being pointed at the Taliban, especially at a group led by a Fazl-e-Saeed who hails from Uchat village in Lower Kurram. Sections of the media have reported that the Mangal tribe is supporting the Taliban and their overlords, the Haqqanis. The relationship of the Haqqanis with the Mangals is rather well known since the very start of the Taliban scourge in this part of FATA. Pockets of population in the Pir Qayyum area, near Sadda in Lower Kurram, were some of the earliest supporters of the Haqqani network.

I had noted last month that the Pir Qayyum, Sateen and Shasho camp in Lower Kurram are active bases operated by the Haqqanis and the Taliban and free use of these facilities was never a problem for them. However, what they really need is an unhindered access to their bases in Tari Mangal, Mata Sangar (a reported hideout of Siraj Haqqani), Makhrani, Wacha Darra and Spina Shaga in Upper Kurram to launch attacks into Afghanistan during the upcoming summer fighting. Spina Shaga is also supposed to be a confluence point between Gulbuddin Hikmetyar and the Haqqani network, and massive activity has been reported at the compounds there in recent months.

As US pressure mounts on Pakistan to take action against the Haqqanis in North Waziristan, it has got both the Haqqanis and the Pakistani security establishment concerned. The need to relocate the jihadist assets to safe bases in Kurram has now become urgent but the pace of developments in Kurram in the post-peace accord phase has not been to the liking of the establishment and its militant allies. While the Toori-Bangash tribes of Upper Kurram had agreed to a peace deal with other Kurramis, they never did offer any guarantees of free movement of the Haqqanis and Hizb-e-Islami across the Afghan border.

After battering the Kurramis one more time, the ‘chief-negotiator’ Khalil Haqqani has been inducted back into action on the pretext of ironing things out and salvaging the peace accord. He has now been conducting meetings with the Kurramis in Peshawar at Jan Hotel on Kohat Road. The deep state, through its jihadist proxies, has thus decided to ‘prod’ the Tooris into moving things along, and fast.

As far as the deep state is concerned, the Kurram peace agreement was never designed to bring harmony between the Shia and Sunni tribes of Kurram. Like all the aforementioned agreements, the Kurram peace deal too is a tactical manoeuvre in the establishment’s strategy of hedging its bets in post-US Afghanistan. And, just like all previous agreements with the jihadists, this agreement — even if salvaged — will leave the Taliban strengthened and will mean more misery for Kurram.
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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X Posted with a hat tip to Vikram S.

In the Islamic Republic of Pakistan it is the fate of critically injured Non-Muslim Dhimmi‘s to first endure being badgered to converting to Mohammaddenism before being permitted to receive emergency medical treatment :x :
Convert or go to hell: Tablighis tell Non-Muslim patients at Govt Hospitals

By: Urooj Zia | Published: April 01, 2011

KARACHI - Twenty-three-year-old Zain*, a Catholic Christian, was admitted to the emergency ward of the Civil Hospital Karachi after he was shot and wounded as a passer-by in a crossfire. While his worried parents and sister stood around waiting for the doctor’s verdict, men in green turbans and high shalwars swooped down on Zain. “Brother, you must denounce your infidel ways. Kalma parhein (recite the Kalma),” they told the young man who was barely conscious and obviously in immense pain. “Become a Muslim, and god will forgive you all your transgressions against him. Die a Muslim!” Zain’s 17-year-old sister pleaded with them once to leave the family alone. “My brother is in pain. Please, let us take care of him,” she said. In response, one of the men turned around and gruffly told her to shut up. “Do not interfere in god’s work,” she was told.

Such scenes are no longer an anomaly at government hospitals in Karachi: men from various religious factions – the Tablighi Jamaat in particular – stalk the hallways of emergency wards, hoping to earn ‘savaab’ by converting non-Muslims on their deathbeds. In their quest for supposed divine rewards, they ignore the pleas of the families to be left alone with their loved one, as well as any pain that the patient might be in. Zain’s parents pulled their aside. “We know the consequences of interfering,” his father, who works as a mechanic, said quietly after the men had left when Zain, who had lost consciousness by then, did not respond. ........................

Pakistan Today
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by arun »

The suppression of the Baloch / Baluch ethnic minority by the Punjabi dominated Security Agencies of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan continues relentlessly with no letup in enforced disappearances and extra judicial killings:

Balochistan’s misery: Cases of missing persons’ still unresolved
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

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The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) releases the “State of Human Rights in 2010.

After reading the report one is left with no doubt about Pakistani “Big Heartedness” that enables them to set their problematic human right record aside and stand up for real and imagined instances of the violation of the human rights of Mohammaddens in all the corners of the world :wink: .

On the topic of the more pure Mohamaddens killing the less pure Mohamaddens in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan:
The country witnessed a series of faith-based attacks in which not only were minorities targeted but 418 Muslims belonging to various sects were killed. Suicide attacks on Muslims injured 628 people, mainly Shia and Barelvi
On the topic of the persecution of Non-Mohamaddens Dhimmis besides Non-Mohamadden sects deemed heretical in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan:
The report said prejudices of law-enforcement personnel were believed to be a hurdle in effective protection of religious minorities in serious danger from Taliban or sectarian militant groups.

HRCP secretary-general I.A. Rehman said that in most of the religious-based killings the federal and the provincial government concerned even failed to express sympathy with the victims. He referred to faith-based killing of 99 Ahmedis across the country.
The report highlighted a growing spread of hate literature and said it had been monitored that in the mainstream Urdu newspapers 1,468 news articles and editorials promoted hate, intolerance and discrimination against Ahmedis.

“A student in Lahore was denied admission to MSc in zoology in a sate-run college because of his faith.”

The report said little progress had been made in bringing to justice those involved in violence and arson against a Christian locality in Gojra in 2009.

About 25 per cent of the 102 Sikh families in Orakzai Agency were forced to leave their generations-old homeland after Taliban asked them to pay Jaziya or leave the area. They were able to return after a military operation.

According to the Balochistan director of the federal human rights ministry, at least 27 Hindu families from the province sought asylum in India because of security threats.
Mr Rehman said the political parties had failed to contribute towards improving the human rights conditions.

“They cannot even speak clearly on the issue because they are not true political parties, these are just brokers and rubber-stamps,” he said.

The reports said at least 64 people were charged under the blasphemy law in 2010 and many of them were imprisoned.
On the topic of the persecution of the Baloch ethnic minority in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan:
Another 118 people were killed and 40 injured in 117 incidents of target killing in Balochistan, including 29 non-Baloch settlers and 17 members of the Shia Hazara community.

The bodies of 59 missing persons were found in Balochistan.
Read it all in Dawn:

Govt personnel involved in rights abuse: HRCP

The complete HRCP report is available here. Note that it is a 19 MB download:

State of Human Rights in 2010
SSridhar
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by SSridhar »

ETPB keeps income from minorities' worship places secret
The Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) is keeping the income generated from the worship places of the Hindu and Sikh communities in the country a secret.

The ETPB chairman does not disclose the total income generated whenever he is asked to do so, the Lower House of parliament was informed on Thursday. On a call attention notice, a member of the minority community, Kishan Chand Parwani, sought the attention of the House towards the illegal allotment of plots by the ETPB.

He said that the plots had been illegally allotted to the Ministry of Minorities Affairs officials and others by the ETPB chairman.

Parwani said that the House should form a committee to seek details of the property of the two communities held by ETPB as well as the income generated so far.

Minister for Religious Affairs, Syed Khursheed Shah, assured the House that the minorities would not be subjected to excesses in the country, adding that whatever income was generated from the properties and worship place of the Hindu and Sikh communities would be spent on their welfare.

He said that if the amount was spent on the construction of worship places for the minorities, it would send out a strong message to the world, showing that Pakistan was a tolerant county, where the minorities were free to practice their religion.

Another member of the minority community, Munawar Lal, suggested that the ETPB board should be restructured in a way that all ten members should be sitting MNAs from the minority community. Taking notice of the suggestions of the members of the minority communities, Acting Speaker, Faisal Karim Kundi, agreed to constitute a committee to probe into the matters of the ETPB, which would submit its report within three months.
anupmisra
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by anupmisra »

SSridhar wrote:ETPB keeps income from minorities' worship places secret
The Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) is keeping the income generated from the worship places of the Hindu and Sikh communities in the country a secret.
Another member of the minority community, Munawar Lal, suggested that the ETPB board should be restructured in a way that all ten members should be sitting MNAs from the minority communty
Yep! Like, that's going to help. Mr. Munawar Lal must be living in a fool's paradise. Oops! yes, he is.
arun
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by arun »

In the Islamic Republic of Pakistan a Mohammadden mob works itself up into a frenzy on the Muslim Sabbath of Friday and tries to burn down Christian homes while he Police react by taking the Christian’s in custody :roll: .

Truly there is no justice for Non-Mohamadden “Dhimmi’s” in the worlds first “IEDological Muslim State” the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

False blasphemy charges: Gojra-like carnage narrowly averted in Gujranwala
anupmisra
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by anupmisra »

joshvajohn wrote:Pakistan's Minorities Minister Bhatti Is Killed in Gun Attack in Islamabad
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-0 ... mabad.html

From the blog:
In Punjab, it doesn’t matter if one is a Hindu or a Christian, as long as one is an “Untouchable”.
Falak feels that the growing conversion trend among Hindus in Pakistan is likely to give a major blow to the community in the coming years.
arun
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Re: Oppression of minorities in Pakistan

Post by arun »

Pakistani origin Ali Dayan Hasan of Human Rights Watch writing in the Jakarta Globe describes the oppression of the “less pure” minority Mohammadden Ahmadiyya sect by their fellow Mohammadden’s of the “more pure” other sects in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and cautions Indonesia from following the example of the sole Mohammadden Nuclear Power:

Indonesia Risks Taking Pakistan's Path to Intolerance
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