While the followers of the worlds largest religion, are visibly rattled over the recent Joseph Colony disaster in Lahore where an unruly mob had set ablaze the houses of the Christians, besides reducing their belongings to mere ashes, they are yet to erase the memories of a six-month old incident when the prayer leader of an Islamabad mosque was arrested by police on charges of fabricating the evidence that he had used to accuse a 14-year old Christian girl Rimsha Masih of blasphemy. Just to recall, in September 2012, poor Rimsha Masih could have faced a death penalty for allegedly desecrating the Quran, but a timely testimony from an eye-witness in her favour and against the prayer leader has saved her from going to the gallows.
We all know that non-Muslim minorities like the Hindus, Ahmadis and Sikhs etc and have already voiced grave concern, and so have their sympathizers in the US and Europe, over the failure of successive Pakistani regimes to protect the rights of minorities in a country where over 2.9 million followers of seven different faiths, besides Islam, are living together. These minorities comprise more than three per cent of all Pakistanis having national identity cards.The break-up of religious minorities in Pakistan shows that the Hindu community is the largest with 1.4 million followers. Christians are second on this list with 1.27 million followers.
Then, there are 125,681 Ahmadis or Qadiyanis, over 33,000 Bahais, 6,146 Sikhs and over 4,000 Zoroastrians or Parsees.Meanwhile, no fewer than 1,500 Pakistani citizens have classified themselves as Buddhists. The history of persecution of Christians in Pakistan is not very old. Just 15 years ago, a Christian Ayub Masih was the first to be convicted of blasphemy and sentenced to death. Ayub was accused by a neighbour of stating that he supported British writer Salman Rushdie, author of The Satanic Verses. Though the lower court had upheld Ayubs conviction, his lawyer was able to prove before the Pakistan Supreme Court that the accuser had used the conviction to force Masihs family off their land and then acquired control of the property. Masih was resultantly released.
Since 9/11, a time period that has seen dozens of millions of Muslims slating the United States and its European allies for killing and suppressing Muslims in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan etc, attacks against Christians and other minorities have significantly increased in the Muslim world. And Pakistan is no exception. While terrorists have repeatedly been blaming these minorities of supporting the United States and its European allies, ordinary Muslims have been screaming worldwide against what they dub an anti-Islam killing spree led by the United States and the European nations.
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