Prime Minister of Pakistan promises to Protect Religious Minorities


ASIA/PAKISTAN - Prime Minister Imran Khan ensures the protection of religious minorities; for the Church "it is an encouraging step"

Karachi (Agenzia Fides) - "The speech of Prime Minister Imran Khan is very encouraging and gives a new hope to the religious minorities living in Pakistan. In the past also the leaderships said such nice words but were not able to fulfill them": this is what Bishop Samson Shukardin OFM, at the head of the Catholic Diocese of Hyderabad said to Fides. "We were born and brought up in Pakistan", adds the Bishop "but we still do not get equal rights, it is a sad reality. I hope and pray that the Prime Minister can really put his declarations of intent into practice, since as religious minority in Pakistan we need the protection of our people and places of worship".
The Franciscan bishop declares, however, that he appreciates the initiatives and provisions that the government led by Imran Khan is already implementing for the benefit of religious minorities.

In his speech at the meeting held on July 29th at the Presidential Residence in Islamabad to celebrate in advance Minorities Day - a celebration that will be celebrated on August 11th in the rest of the country - Imran Khan stressed that it is obligatory for Muslims to "provide protection to the people of religious minorities and provide them their basic rights, freedom and justice. "We have to learn from the time of Madina, 1400 years ago, how our Prophet Muhammad treated the minorities living in the state. We must follow Prophet Muhammad’s approach with minorities. He formed a welfare state that was promoting compassion, humanity, justice and rights for everyone.

Imran Khan also added that in Islam no practice comparable to forced conversions is conceivable, since "God asked his messengers to spread the message, accepting it and becoming a believer is a free will of the person. We cannot force anyone to accept Islam under the threat of arms or persecution, or forcing religious minority women to convert after they have been kidnapped. Such acts cannot in any way be considered compatible with Islam. And those who work to convert people by force, kidnapping them or subjecting them to threats, show that they have no correct understanding of Islamic teachings".
The prime minister also indicated the importance of making a real rule of law in Pakistan: "If we have the rule of law", Imran Khan said in this regard, "most of our problems will be solved". And concluded by reassuring religious minorities, and recalling that "it is the Governments' responsibility to give you protection and make you feel that you are also equal citizens of this country. I assure you that our Government will not only protect you, but will also take care of the development of your places of worship".
Father Bonnie Mendes, a senior Catholic priest from the diocese of Faisalabad, points out that "the government of Imran speaks about making Pakistan a 'Modern Islamic Welfare State'. The Government will work to give religious minorities full citizenship. I hope that Government will act fast on their promises. And it will have to intervene forcefully on all those who are pushing people of religious minorities to conversion". (AG) (Full Text Agenzia Fides, 1/8/2019)

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