The Persecution of Pakistanโs Christians
ICC Note:
The threat against Christians in Pakistan continues: โChristians, marginalized by the Muslim majority and lacking in representation within their own government, are powerless to defend themselves against these attacks. They are easy targets for those who do not see them as equal human beings, deserving of the same rights as Muslims.โ
Faith J. H. McDonnell
06/29/2012 Pakistan (FrontPageMag)- โThe People of the Bookโ is Islamโs distinctive name for non-Muslim monotheists such as Jews and Christians. It sounds like a title given to those respected and revered. Unfortunately, the opposite is true. โProtected People,โ another such term, sounds so reassuring. Who doesnโt want to be protected? But for the Islamic worldโs โProtected Peopleโ there is no protection.
Nowhere is this truer than for Pakistanโs tiny minority Christian population. Rather than being protected, Pakistani Christians are disadvantaged and victimized in every way. Dhimmis, treated as second-class citizens, they live with grinding poverty and Muslim contempt, deprived of education and employment opportunities. Vulnerable to threats and lacking the means to defend themselves, they are the inevitable targets of Islamist attacks, even victimized by those who are supposed to protect them, merely because they are Christians.
Christians in northern Pakistan, such as the precarious Afghanistan-bordering Northwest Frontier Territory Province (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa) and Punjab Province have long suffered and continue to suffer oppression and persecution. But increasingly, Christians in southern Pakistanโs Sindh Province are being persecuted under the โTalibanizationโ of Karachi. Afghani and Pakistani Pashtun militants thatย have been flooding Pakistanโs largest cityย forthe last few years are causing problems for the whole city, but especially for the impoverished, minority Christian community. They and other Islamists subject southern Pakistanโs Christians to horrific violations of their human rights and dignity.
Fleeing from military offenses against the Taliban in the Swat Valley and South Waziristan, the militants have used Karachiโs slum neighborhoods as a place to regroup and raise funds. But they also use their presence in southern Pakistan as an opportunity to attack the Christian community in Sindh Province. Karachiโs Christian poor live in these same slums.
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On the evening of April 21, 2009, Christians who were attempting to clean the graffiti off their buildings were attacked by a mob of over 100 masked Taliban gunmen. The gunmen shot into the crowd, seriously wounding three people. One of the shooting victims, 11 year-old Irfan Masih, died from his injuries several days later. As recalled inย UnDhimmi,ย theย Pakistan Christian Postย reported the gunmen shouted, โYou infidels have to convert to Islam or die!โ They demanded to know why the Christians had removed the warnings they wrote and declared, โHow dare you stage a procession against the Taliban!โ Then the militantsย ransacked and set fire to houses and churches,ย burning Bibles and beating women in the streets.
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No ransom demand was made, however, in a more recent kidnapping of two Christian hospital employees in Karachi. In March 2012, Compass Direct News Serviceย reportedย that Indrias Javaid, 42, the general manager, and Isaac Samson, 26, from the finance office, of South Korean-based Good Samaritan Hospital were taken from the hospital van en route to work by four โfair-skinnedโ Pashtu-speaking suspects. Police believe that the kidnappers took them to Pakistanโs tribal areas. According to a senior police investigator, โmost radical groups believe that Christian NGOs are involved in evangelizing โunder the guise of charityโ and have been targeted for that reason.โ
Pashtun Taliban militants are not the only Islamists attacking Christians in southern Pakistan. Jameel Sawaan was gunned down on the morning of November 16, 2011, when he and his assistant were opening up his cosmetics shop in the Gulshan-e-Iqbal neighborhood. A young man approached and shot the lay evangelist in the neck and the face and then fled on a motorcycle with two other men. Sawaanโs son, Zahid Jameel, toldย Compass Directย that his father was killed โbecause of his preaching of the Bible.โ โThere is no other reason,โ he said. He explained that for several years Sawaan had been reaching out to โshare the Good Newsโ with people.
Elvis Steven says that Christians frequently are afraid to contact the police about crimes because some police accept bribes from Islamists or are sympathetic to their cause. Other times they are just indifferent to the plight of Christians. Such was true when a group of Muslim youthsย shot and killed two Christians outside The Salvation Army church in Hyderabad, Sindh Province on March 21, 2011.
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Jameelโs mother, Surraya Bibi, said that the attitude of the local police had exacerbated the Christiansโ sorrow. โThe police acted as if it was not important,โย she exclaimed. The police refused to file a report on the case until the Christians blocked the main road of Hyderabad with the bodies of the two men for several hours.
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Christians, marginalized by the Muslim majority and lacking in representation within their own government, are powerless to defend themselves against these attacks. They are easy targets for those who do not see them as equal human beings, deserving of the same rights as Muslims. Elvis Stevens says that southern Pakistanโs Christians seem to be neglected and abandoned even by Christian mission and relief groups working in Pakistan. Most international ministries and human rights organizations have focused on northern Pakistan, perhaps believing that southern Pakistanโs Christians were not suffering as much as Christians in the north of the country. That is no longer true, if it ever was. The Christians of Karachi desperately need assistance in the face of this Talibanization of southern Pakistan.
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