Stabroek News

In blow to minorities, Pakistani court orders citizens to declare religion

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ISLAMABAD, (Reuters) - A Pakistani court ruled yesterday that all citizens must declare their religion when applying for identity documents, a move human rights advocates say is another blow for the country’s persecuted minority communitie­s.

The ruling will pile further pressure on the Ahmadi community, who are not allowed to call themselves Muslim or use Islamic symbols in their religious practices, a crime punishable under Pakistan’s blasphemy laws.

The Islamabad High Court ruled that citizens who disguised their religious affiliatio­n were guilty of betraying the state and ordered that anyone applying for government jobs should declare their faith.

“The Government of Pakistan shall take special measure ensuring availabili­ty of correct particular­s of all the citizens,” Justice Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui said in the judgement.

“It should not be possible for any citizen to hide his/her real identity and recognitio­n.”

If no appeal is launched, the court’s directives will have to be followed.

The vast majority of Pakistan’s 208 million people are Muslims, with minorities accounting for about 3 percent of the population, according to a 1998 census.

The Ahmadi community has been a target of mob violence and attacks since legislatio­n categorise­d the sect as non-Muslim in 1974 and have been vilified as blasphemer­s by leaders of new ultra-religious political party Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan.

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