EU threatens Pak over minority persecution

Wednesday 08th May 2019 06:54 EDT
 
 

Brussels: The European Union (EU) has threatened to suspend all subsidies and trade preferences to Islamabad if it does not take measures to "dismantle" its "discriminatory system" against religious minorities. In a letter to Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, 51 members of the European Parliament said, "Over the last few years, religious extremist groups, often with the support of the government, have grown in influence, further generating religious prejudices against minorities. Concomitantly, instances of attacks against minorities, their places of worship etc. have also increased over the years."

"As members of the European Parliament, we would wish to remind the Islamic Republic of Pakistan that the oppression of religious minorities violated the United Nations treaty on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), which is the foundation for the International Convent on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), a binding UN human rights agreement. We would be compelled to suspend all subsidies and trade preferences until the effective implementation of the Convention could be assured by the Government of Pakistan," it added.

The Commission held the past and present governments responsible for contributing and encouraging "acts of violence against minorities by radical Islamic groups." Expressing "grave concern" over the case of Asia Bibi, a Christian woman who had been falsely charged under the draconian blasphemy law, the EU wrote, "The existence of such religious discriminatory laws encourage citizens to engage in intolerant and violent acts against non-Muslims."

Citing a report by the NGO, Movement for Solidarity and Peace in Pakistan, EU noted that at least 1,000 girls belonging to religious minority groups, Christian and Hindu communities, often minors, are "kidnapped and forced to marry Muslim men every year".


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