The persona of courage, however, fell flat when he struck a deal with the law breaking fundamentalists, wherein, he promised that Asia Bibi and her family would not be allowed to leave the country and the Government would not block a review petition of the verdict put in by the protestors. This act of capitulation by the prime minister has irretrievably damaged whatever little trust that existed between the Pakistani state and the minorities of the country.
Pakistan, in any case, has a terrible record of persecution of minorities. At the time of partition, Pakistan had 11 to 12 percent Hindu/Sikh population, now it is barely 1.5 percent. Muslims of sects other than the predominant Sunnis are being blatantly persecuted. Sections 298-B and 298-C of the Pakistan Panel Code outlaws Ahmadis from calling their place of worship a Masjid. In September, 2013, the Sialkot police tore down the minarets of an Ahmadi place of worship simply because a fundamentalist cleric gave a call that the building resembled a mosque.
The persecution of Christians is, by far, the most brutal! The suicide bombing at all Saints Church in Peshawar in 2013 left 80 dead and about 100 injured. This was followed in 2015 with another suicide bomb attack on two churches in Lahore, Pakistan, with many casualties. In August 2012, Rimsha Masih, an 11 year old Pakistani Christian girl was arrested under the Blasphemy Law on allegations of having desecrated the Holy Quran. The arrest was allowed despite scant evidence and with utter disregard to her being a minor suffering from Down Syndrome; the hapless family ultimately migrated to Canada to escape horrible persecution. In November, 2014, a pregnant Christian woman, Shama Bibi, was beaten to death and thrown into the furnace of a brick kiln, for allegedly desecrating the Holy Koran. Her husband was thrown in the furnace even while he was alive.
All such acts have also put paid to the spirit of nationalism that the Christian community in Pakistan harboured for their country. They have also elicited international disgust but the Pakistani leadership remains non-bothered; successive governments in Pakistan have done nothing to assuage the sense of insecurity of the community or the other minorities. Now Prime Minister Imran Khan has put a lid on whatever pretensions of liberal secularism that have been harboured from time to time.
One can only look back with nostalgia at the promise made by Muhammad Ali Jinnah to the people of the country. “You are free; you are free to go to your temples, you are free to go to your mosques or to any other place 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,” he said. Apparently, his successors have other ideas about what the nation will look like in the future. Prime Minister Imran Khan, particularly, has demonstrated that he will not hesitate from committing Blasphemy with this office and the minorities of his country to achieve his vision of a pure Islamic state.
(Jaibans Singh is a reputed analyst, columnist and author)
Photo Courtesy – Cruxnow.com /Siasat Daily
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Pakistan’s Blasphemy Law; Discriminatory legislations in the world; Blasphemy; Pakistan; PM Imran Khan; Religion in Pakistan; Islamabad; Hindus; Christians; Ahmadiyas; Supreme Court of Pakistan; Asia Bibi; India-Pakistan; Muhammad Ali Jinnah;