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Run for your life: Persecution of Shias and Ahmadis in Pakistan

but since you're all about morality today, why dont you do more to ensure the rights of untouchables in india?

you'll kill 2 birds with 1 stone....you'll bring more attention to your name, and you'll actually be doing something productive!
 
but since you're all about morality today, why dont you do more to ensure the rights of untouchables in india?

you'll kill 2 birds with 1 stone....you'll bring more attention to your name, and you'll actually be doing something productive!

stick with the topic...the thread is about pakistan and her minorities. You can discuss it on some other thread.
 
but since you're all about morality today, why dont you do more to ensure the rights of untouchables in india?

you'll kill 2 birds with 1 stone....you'll bring more attention to your name, and you'll actually be doing something productive!

See.. Now that's trolling (the thing you were accusing me of ;) ).. There is a separate thread for that.. Please talk about this in that thread..
 
Why are we so afraid of our minorities? | PK ARTICLES HUB

By Syed Mohammad Ali

Injustices faced by minority populations remain a problem around the world, ranging from the plight of migrants in western countries, to Kurdish troubles in the Middle East, to the discrimination faced by the significant Muslims minority in India.

Leaving aside the plight of sectarian and ethnic tensions, Pakistan itself has but a miniscule religious minority, protecting the rights of which should hardly pose a significant challenge for the state. Yet, our track record in this regard remains dismal. A latest “Life on the Margins” study by the National Commission for Justice and Peace, is quite perturbing as well. Over 75 per cent of the surveyed women who work reported being subjected to sexual harassment. The literacy rate of these women was found to be 10 percentage points below the national rate (57 per cent) and the infant mortality rate among them was higher than the national average. It was also disconcerting to note that nearly 62 per cent of Hindu and Christian women fear that a majority of Muslims would not come to their aid if they were being discriminated against.

These fears are substantiated considering the prevalence of forced conversions to Islam and increasing incidents of kidnappings which have instilled a deep sense of insecurity amongst our minority communities. The Human Rights Commission’s Balochistan chapter has identified an ongoing exodus of Hindu families from Quetta due to the fear of kidnappings for ransom, yet the Balochistan government does not seem to be doing much to address this problem.

NGO reports indicate that over 568 FIRs for forced marriages were lodged last year across 40 districts of Pakistan, with the majority of such cases having been filed in Sindh. While many Muslim women and girls are also forced into marriage within our country, females in minority communities are even more vulnerable to such coercion since they face a ‘double jeopardy’ of being subjected to discrimination due to their sex and religion.

The government has taken some steps for empowering minorities by fixing a five per cent quota in government jobs, reserving four seats for minorities in the Upper House and declaration of August 11 as ‘Minorities Day’. It was also encouraging to note minority rights being discussed during the recent National Assembly proceedings and acknowledgement by incumbent parliamentarians of the need for enacting legislation to better protect minority rights and to particularly curb the phenomenon of forced conversions. Another proposal which merits further political support is helping minority women feel less alienated from the country’s politics by instituting a parliamentary quota to be established to resolve this discrepancy. Yet, the inclusion of one or two reserved seats for minority women within the national or provincial assemblies will hardly be enough. Much more needs to be done to ensure protection of the minorities as it is enshrined in our Constitution.

The judiciary and the executive also need to overcome their existing complacency and take a much more proactive stance in safeguarding vulnerable minorities from blatant incidences of exploitation and violence. Moreover, the silent majority within our country must also overcome its complacency or indifference and denounce this unbearable level of intolerance. Until this occurs, the existing myopia towards vulnerable minorities will just continue spilling over to further exacerbate strife perpetuated in the name of other divergences, be they sectarian or ethnic in nature.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 26th, 2012.
 
Pakistanis are probably mixed on it. Regardless of whether they are Muslim or non-Muslim (Muslims believe Allah SWT has the final say) they should be treated as lawful citizens of Pakistan who enjoy rights shared by other Pakistanis
many threads existing already on this topic; surely you've even authored many of those threads ;)

But Pakistan went too far in suppressing Ahmedis by ordinance XX. In Bangladesh Ahmedis are only banned from missionary activities.Most awkward situation of Grave Stone of Abdus Salam which no-one even bothered to Change it to "First Pakistani nobel prize winner."
 
i just hope after all the chaos , Order is restored...Be it the sunnis, Be it the shias, Be it the Ahmadees ...none should be allowed to aquire that much power so that any group could bare any individual from the liberty he enjoys under the fundamental human rights.Pakistan as a nation needs to stand up against this evil...!
 
theyre much worse off in Indonesia....

by the way, me personally i could care less whether they are Muslim or non Muslim...that's between them and God.
 
Guys, the problem here is not the unspeakable way of slaughter, but rather that those Shea got killed in the name of Islam. This is not Islam and it will never be, this is not how you help spreading the true peaceful image of Islam. I cried and got shocked just yesterday when I heared one of Arab forum members got killed in the recent Baghdad bombings. Even he dedicated most of his time on internet supporting Syrian revolution. He was so decsent and kind. Allah yerhamo.:cry:

May those rest in peace.
 
theyre much worse off in Indonesia....

by the way, me personally i could care less whether they are Muslim or non Muslim...that's between them and God.

Can you throw some light on the guy named Malik Ishaq of anti-Shia terror group Laskhar E Jhangvi. Is this guy some sort of fugitive.
 
Maulana Mohammad Ali Jauhar (Pioneer of the Khilafat Movement and a dauntless fighter in the struggle of independence) said:

“Qatl-e-Hussain asl main marg-e-Yazid hai,
Islam zindaa hota hai har Karbala ke baad”

(In the murder of Hussain, lies the death of Yazid, for Islam resurrects after every Karbala)


James Corne (Author of History of China)
“Hussain and his companions faced eight kinds of enemies. On the four sides the army of Yezid was their enemy which was ceaselessly raining arrows; the fifth foe was the sun of Arabia that was scorching the bodies; the sixth foe was the desert of Karbala the sands of which were scorching like a heated furnace; the seventh and eighth foes were the overpowering hunger and the unbearable thirst. Thus on those who fought with thousands of infidels in such conditions has ended bravado; on such a people no gallant (hero) can ever have pre-eminence.”

we SHIA's of IMAM ALI A.S , the followers of Imam Hussain A.S are NOT afraid of DEATH .... MR.MUSH !!!

LONG LIVE THE SACRIFICE OF IMAM HUSSAIN A.S ....

Why you don't say followers of Islam and Mohammed PBAH. All of us look at Ali AS and Hussien AS with love and respect but they themselves are followers of Mohammed PBAH.
 

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