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Pakistan rejects US rebuke on religious freedoms

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ISLAMABAD — Pakistan on Wednesday condemned a U.S. decision to add it to a list of nations that infringe on religious freedom, calling the move “unilateral and politicall­y motivated.”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo added Pakistan to the U.S. list of “countries of particular concern” regarding protection for people to worship according to their beliefs. It was previously on a special watch list. The downgrade would expose Pakistan to potential American sanctions, but Pompeo waived those penalties, citing U.S. national interests.

The Foreign Ministry condemned the move, saying Pakistan is a “multi-religious and pluralisti­c society where people of diverse faiths and denominati­ons live t o get h er.”

In recent years Islamic extremists have repeatedly attacked religious minorities in Pakistan, including Shiite Muslims and Christians. Members of the Ahmadi sect face heavy discrimina­tion and are subject to restrictio­ns stemming from a 1984 law that forbids them from “posing as Muslims.”

The U.S. said the decision to downgrade Pakistan was largely the result of a law that prescribes death for blasphemy against Islam. The mere rumor of insulting Islam can spark lynchings in Pakistan.

In October, Pakistan’s Supreme Court acquitted Asia Bibi, a Christian woman who had been on death row for eight years after being convicted of insulting the Prophet Muhammad, charges she denied. The court upheld the blasphemy law but said there was not enough evidence to convict her.

Her release sparked days of mass protests and violence by religious hard-liners who vowed to kill her. She is under tight security at an undisclose­d location, and is expected to seek asylum in another country.

Authoritie­s arrested Khadim Hussein Rizvi, the cleric behind the protests, in November.

Pakistan said the U.S. decision was biased, adding that there were “serious questions on the credential­s and impartiali­ty of the self-proclaimed jury involved in this unwarrante­d exercise.”

The ministry said an independen­t National Commission on Human Rights addressed concerns over violations of minority rights and that successive government­s in the Muslim-majority nation had made the protection of minorities a priority.

“Pakistan does not need counsel by any individual country how to protect the rights of its minorities,” it said.

The Trump administra­tion has had tense relations with Pakistan, which it says has failed to combat the Taliban and other extremist groups that attack U.S. forces in neighborin­g Afghanista­n, charges rejected by Islamabad. ( AP)

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