Statement of USCIRF’s Chairman Dr. Robert George concerning Minorities Day in
Pakistan this Sunday.
On
Sunday, August 11, Pakistan will celebrate National Minorities Day, giving
recently-elected Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif his first formal opportunity to
recognize the value of religious minority communities to the
nation.
Created
in 2011, this day is a bittersweet irony for Pakistan.
On
the one hand, it recalls the inclusive and tolerant vision of the past: of
Quaid-e-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah, Pakistan's founder, whose speech to the nation
on August 11, 1947 included these words:
"You
are free. You are free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your
mosques or any other places of worship...You may belong to any religion or caste
or creed - that has nothing to do with the business of the
state."
On
the other hand, it highlights the stark realities of the present: how Pakistan
has betrayed Jinnah's vision by failing to fulfill his words with concrete
actions that protect religious minorities from harm. Indeed, Islamabad has done
little to stem a rising tide of violence against members of Pakistan's Ahmadi,
Christian, Hindu, Shi'a, and Sikh communities.
Last
month, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) released
the findings from its Pakistan
Religious Violence Project. Tracking publicly reported attacks
against religious communities over the past 18 months, the project collected
alarming data that catalogued the human toll of Pakistan's intolerance and
hatred. During that time period, there were more than 200 incidents of
sectarian violence that led to 1,800 casualties, including more than 700
deaths.
Many
of those killed or injured were Shi'a citizens, with some of the most lethal
assaults taking place during Shi'a holy months and pilgrimages. During the
year-and-a-half period covered by the study, there were 77 attacks against the
Shi'a, 54 against Ahmadis, 37 against Christians, 16 against Hindus, and 3
against Sikhs.
Since
the publication of USCIRF's report, the death toll has continued to rise. On
July 27, at
least 57 people were killed and more than 150 wounded by bombs targeting a market frequented by
Shi'a in northwestern Pakistan.
To
his credit, Sharif raised concerns about the plight of religious minorities in
his maiden
speech to Pakistan's National Assembly and tasked his government to crack down on
militants targeting the Shi'a. Hopefully his comments reflect a realization
that the time for mere talk and symbolism has passed and that resolute action is
needed to ensure that the perpetrators of violence against religious communities
are arrested, prosecuted, and jailed along with the violent extremist groups
that have spurred the bloodshed.
Moreover,
police officers must be held accountable for thwarting justice when they turn a
blind eye to attacks or refuse to file police reports when the victims are
religious minorities. With luck, Sharif's comments also intimate that the
government will reconsider its enforcement of blasphemy and anti-Ahmadi laws
which violate international human rights standards and encourage extremist
attacks on perceived transgressors. Just recently, a
Christian man, Sajjad Masih, was found guilty of denigrating the Prophet
Mohammed and sentenced
to life imprisonment, despite the accuser recanting. He joins nearly 40 others
who either are on death row or serving life sentences for allegedly blasphemous
activity.
Interestingly,
Masih's sentencing occurred on the eve of the fourth anniversary of attacks
against Christians in Punjab in the village of Gojra -- where Masih is from --
in which eight were killed, 18 were injured, two churches and at least 75 houses
were burned, and not a single perpetrator was brought to
justice.
Pakistan's
surreal inversion of justice, in which some are punished for alleged words and
beliefs while others commit literal acts of violence against them with impunity
and without consequence, must end. Sharif's government must prove it is serious
about ending this dual attack on its most vulnerable citizens. One simple step
it can take immediately is to reopen the Federal Ministry of Interfaith Harmony
and reaffirm its mission of promoting respect for members of all religious
communities, particularly religious minorities. In the meantime, USCIRF will
keep monitoring the situation and the Sharif government to determine whether it
should continue recommending that the United States designate Pakistan a
"country of particular concern," marking it as among the world's most egregious
violators of freedom of religion or belief.
Sixty-six
years ago, Pakistan's founding father laid a dream of equality and freedom
before his nation. It is time for Pakistan's government to honor that dream not
merely by repeating its words, but enacting it through
deeds.
Robert P. George is the Chairman of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF).
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