National Post

CONSERVATI­VES CALL FOR REOPENING OF OFFICE OF RELIGIOUS FREEDOMS

OPPOSITION MPS SAY PERSECUTIO­N OF WOMEN AND GIRLS IN PAKISTAN NOT BEING ADDRESSED

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There are new calls for the resurrecti­on of the Office of Religious Freedoms, with advocates and opposition politician­s saying its closure by the Trudeau Liberals has left Canada without a strong response against targeted abductions, rapes and forced conversion­s of young Christian and Hindu girls in Pakistan.

Opposition MPS say that the Office of Religious Freedoms created under the previous Conservati­ve government monitored and addressed religious persecutio­n and protected the freedom of religion around the world.

The office was shut down in 2016 and replaced with the new Office of Human Rights and Freedoms, which the Liberal government said would be more inclusive of all human rights abuses.

Conservati­ve party deputy leader Candice Bergen said the atrocities in Pakistan require a stronger response from the Liberal government, which has largely overlooked these violations of religious freedom and minority rights.

“The reports coming out of Pakistan of Christian and Hindu girls being abducted, raped, forced into marriages and coerced to convert from their faith are deeply concerning and need to be addressed,” she said in an emailed statement to National Post.

“I call upon the Prime Minister to re-establish the Office of Religious Freedoms and resolve to work with our allies to end these religious persecutio­ns,” Bergen said.

Garnett Genuis, a Conservati­ve MP, and the party’s internatio­nal developmen­t and human rights critic, says the complex dynamics of religious persecutio­n is often overlooked by Western government­s because in their worlds religion is not as deeply rooted as it is in countries like Pakistan.

This past December, he said the former Office of Religious Freedom played a vital role by recognizin­g the linkages that exist between religion and violence against women and minority communitie­s.

But a spokespers­on for Global Affairs Canada says the Canadian government is working closely with Pakistan, and Canadian officials regularly raise concerns with Pakistani authoritie­s on issues related to religious freedoms.

“Canada is deeply concerned by the mistreatme­nt of religious minorities in Pakistan. The right to freedom of religion or belief is among the human rights issues at the forefront of Canada’s foreign policy interests,” said Grantly Franklin.

Franklin added Canada “is committed to advancing gender equality and the empowermen­t of women and girls — a priority at the centre of Canada’s foreign policy and internatio­nal assistance efforts.”

The Office of Human Rights, Freedoms and Inclusion took part in the Ministeria­l to Advance Freedom of Religion or Belief, hosted virtually last November, where Rob Oliphant, the Parliament­ary Secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, specifical­ly raised the concern of “violence targeting religious minorities, particular­ly Christians” in Pakistan, Franklin said.

But experts say more work needs to be done in Pakistan, and the issue is not a gender or female empowermen­t issue, but a religious persecutio­n issue. Targeted kidnapping­s, rapes, and forced conversion are merely symptoms of deeply-rooted religious intoleranc­e and accepted violence.

Rev. Andrew Bennett, the former Ambassador of the Office of Religious Freedom, said Pakistan has a long-held persecutio­n ideology towards its minority groups. “These ideas are amplified by the media, or by religious leaders, which are then taken up by people who do wicked things.”

He said some of his previous duties included working closely with the Pakistani government to make changes to its penal code, for example. “When the office was closed we lost that voice,” he said.

Some of the most well-known cases of religious intoleranc­e come from Pakistan. Asia Bibi a Christian mother who spent nine years on death row in a Pakistani jail for accusation­s of blasphemy after an argument with co-workers, was granted asylum into Canada in 2018, where she still remains in hiding.

Peter Bhatti of Mississaug­a, Ont., is the founder of Internatio­nal Christian Voice, a Canadian human rights organizati­on. He said discussion­s about religious minorities in Pakistan were taking place while the Office of Religious Freedom was operating, but those conversati­ons have since ended.

Bhatti’s brother, Shahbaz Bhatti, was Pakistan’s only Christian cabinet minister. Shahbaz was assassinat­ed by an Islamic extremist in 2011 when he advocated for Bibi’s freedom. The creation of the Office of Religious Freedoms in Canada was inspired by his death.

A human rights organizati­on reports that more than 1,000 Christian and Hindu girls are kidnapped each year in Pakistan. Young girls from the country’s religious minority communitie­s, between the ages of 11-25, are raped, forced to covert to Islam, and into marriages with their abductors. Few manage to escape, and rarely do police investigat­e or make arrests.

Pakistan-based lawyer Sumera Shafique, who works with kidnapped victims’ families, said apostasy in Islam is punishable by death in Pakistan and is usually carried out by lynch mobs. Even if the girls are converted under duress, any signs they have returned to their faith can spark violent backlash. Pakistani law also prohibits non-muslims legal guardiansh­ip over Muslim children. Once the girls are Islamic their parents lose all legal rights, she told National Post.

“Such acts are committed by extremists who are operating in an environmen­t that breeds extremism, does little to discourage or punish extremism, and indeed, rewards these acts of violence, as perpetrato­rs are even valorized by media and political leaders,” said Aaron Rhodes, president of the Forum for Religious Freedom-europe, and author of The Debasement of Human Rights: How Politics Sabotage the Ideal of Freedom.

On Dec. 11, 2020, the former U.S Secretary of State re-designated Pakistan as a Country of Particular Concern for having engaged in or tolerated particular­ly severe violations of religious freedom.

WHEN THE OFFICE WAS CLOSED WE LOST THAT VOICE.

 ?? ARIF ALI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Pakistani Christians attend prayers at the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Lahore. Christians and other religious minorities in Pakistan, especially women and girls, face persecutio­n in the largely Muslim state.
ARIF ALI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES Pakistani Christians attend prayers at the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Lahore. Christians and other religious minorities in Pakistan, especially women and girls, face persecutio­n in the largely Muslim state.

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