Lord Alton and Wilson Chowdhry
Many of you will be aware of Wilson's previous meeting with Lord Alton at the house of Lords.  At the meeting he confirmed that his desire to take up a banner for our community. 
Since then we have sent him a report on Pakistan and on the 12th of June we were sent a copy of the supplementary information he intends to refer to after delivering an oral question at the House of Lords.  We are grateful for Lord Alton's inclusion of the BPCA in his research exercise for this question: 
"May I ask what advocacy Her Majesty's Government has undertaken on behalf of persecuted minorities in Pakistan?
Here is the supplementary information:
Article  for E-Politix.com ahead of House of Lords Question on the plight of Pakistan’s  minorities, June 22nd 2011: Question to be raised by crossbench Peer,  Lord Alton of Liverpool.
In  1947, in a speech to the New Delhi Press Club, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, set out the  basis on which the new State of Pakistan was to be founded. In it, he forcefully  defended the right of minorities to be protected and to have their beliefs  respected:
“Minorities,  to whichever community they may belong, will be safeguarded. Their religion,  faith or belief will be secure. There will be no interference of any kind with  their freedom of worship. They will have their protection with regard to their  religion, faith, their life and their culture. They will be, in all respects,  the citizens of Pakistan without any distinction of caste and creed.”  
These words are a forgotten aspiration in today's Pakistan where minorities, ranging from Ahmadis to Sikhs, from Christians to Hindus, Buddhists and Zoroastrians, face relentless violence and profound discrimination.
These words are a forgotten aspiration in today's Pakistan where minorities, ranging from Ahmadis to Sikhs, from Christians to Hindus, Buddhists and Zoroastrians, face relentless violence and profound discrimination.
It is  estimated that, of a population of over 172 million people, at least 4% of the  population come from the minorities: in 2011 the Pakistan Hindu Council put the  number of Hindus alone at 5.5% - some 7 million people,  while there are almost  3 million Christians, and Pakistan’s Ahmadiyya community is 4 million strong.  All of these minorities have suffered grievously, along with those caught up in  the sectarian violence between Sunni and Shi’a Muslims. 
 Jinnah  rightly declared that the Government of Pakistan has a duty to protect all of  its citizens, regardless of their beliefs or origins. The international  community ought to be asking how the State today honours that  pledge.
Take  the Ahmadis.
One  year ago, in two separate attacks in Lahore, 98 Ahmadis were murdered and many  more injured while they were at Friday prayers. The vicious brutality of these  attacks is magnified when considering the Ahmadis' belief: “love for all and  hatred for none.”   
Sadly,  too few share the same passion for tolerance.
While  the Ahmadis consider themselves Muslim and follow all Islamic rituals, in 1974  the State declared them to be  non-Muslim and, in 1984, they were legally barred  from proselytising or identifying themselves as Muslims. Ali Dayan Hassan of  Human Rights Watch believes that Ahmadis had thus become “easy  targets" for militant Sunni groups who behave with impunity believing they  have the full authority of the State in declaring Ahmadis to be infidels.  Despite repeated attacks on the Ahmadis no prosecution of perpetrators has  occurred in the past 15 years. And the situation is set to get worse. Earlier  this month, on June 11th, The Asian Human Rights Commission  issued a statement that “extremists openly plan to kill hundreds of Ahmadis  while the government turns a blind eye.”
Last  year Terrorism Monitor warned that:
 "As  the Pakistani Taliban are trying to spread their war on the Pakistani State,  they are likely to continue to target minorities like the Ahmadis in their  efforts to create instability."
    On March 29th of this year that threat was brutally and  graphically underlined by the murder of Pakistan’s Minister for Minority  Affairs, Mr.Shahbaz Bhatti.  An advocate of reform of the country’s Blasphemy  Law - the cause of many bogus prosecutions against non Muslims - he was gunned  down by self described Taliban assassins as he left his Islamabad home. His  murderers scattered pamphlets describing him as a “Christian infidel”.  The leaflets were signed Taliban al-Qaida  Punjab.”
Shahbaz  Bhatti’s death is the second high profile killing this year of someone asking  for changes to Pakistan’s laws and greater protection for its  minorities. 
The  Foreign Secretary, William Hague, said that Bhatti’s death “is a tragic loss  for Pakistan and for all people who believe in human rights and freedom of  speech.” Alistair Burt, Minister for South Asia, added that he had supported  Mr.Bhatti’s “in his difficult role and in his attempts to revise his  country’s Blasphemy Laws. Those laws have been used to target minorities.”  
Minister  Bhatti’s death was not isolated incidents. 
As  terrorism and instability has intensified, so have the deaths. Over 35,000  people have died in attacks since 2003; 2,522 fatalities in the first six months  of 2011 alone. And, on the day of writing this, a report from Peshwar detailed  the deaths of 34 more people, with over 100 badly injured.  
Meanwhile,  forced conversions to Islam, rape, and forced marriage are increasingly  commonplace.
 Take  the case of Sidra Bibi. 
 She  is a 14 year old Christian living in the district of Sheikhupura in Punjab, and  the daughter of a worker in the cotton industry. She was molested, abducted,  raped and threatened her with death. Physically and psychologically abused, she  became pregnant. Police have refused to accept her  complaint.
 Samina  Ayub, is also a Christian. Aged 17, she lives with her family near Lahore.  Kidnapped, forcibly converted to Islam, renamed Fatima Bibi, she was coerced  into marrying in the Muslim rite. Her family reported the abduction but police  have not prosecuted those responsible. 
Attacks  have also been made on places and books sacred to those with minority beliefs.  The radical Islamist party, Jamiat ulema-e-Islam recently filed an  application to the Supreme Court to ban the circulation of the Bible, describing  it as “blasphemous” and “pornographic”
Such  intolerance and such virulent attacks pose a grave threat to Pakistan, to the  region, but, also, to the UK, where around 1.2 million British citizens of  Pakistani descent now reside. 
Unlike  the authorities who have such a lamentable record in protecting their citizens,  Pakistan’s own citizens clearly understand from where the threat to their  security originates. In an independent survey 90% cited religious extremism as  the greatest threat to the country: which is why we have a duty to speak out for  these vulnerable and preyed upon minorities, especially in the aftermath of the  killing of Osama bin Laden, since when intolerant violence has  intensified. 
The  former Foreign Secretary, David Miliband commented that: "It is when the  international community has taken its eye off the ball in Pakistan that  instability has increased...Internally, Pakistan has a duty to protect minority  groups and needs the support of its allies to do so."
Those  words are in complete accord with Jinnah’s 1947 Declaration promising tolerance,  respect and security for the new country’s minorities - aspirations that need to  be reinserted into the political mainstream.  In 2011 the grievous plight of  Pakistan’s minorities is inextricably bound to its destiny as a nation.      
 
 
 
Within very short-time of the partition, Bengali realized that they can't stay with West Pakistan.The first attack came on Bengali was their language and then long road full of mistakes by West.Yes, the history of Pakistan is full of mistakes, betray, conspiracy, coup and killing.The country what was made based on artificial theory, so called two nation theory was absolutely wrong. religion can't be a nation.This is absolutely wrong.A wrong can'r be right, if it happens then the wrong has to be destroyed to make it right.
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