Gulf Times

Govt rejects US blacklist for religious freedom violations

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Pakistan yesterday rejected Washington’s decision to place it on a blacklist of countries that violate religious freedom, branding the move “politicall­y motivated” and defending its treatment of minorities.

The US move to designate Pakistan “among countries of particular concern” comes at a difficult time for relations between the nations, with the Trump administra­tion accusing Islamabad of failing to act against Islamist militants on its soil.

“Pakistan does not need counsel by any individual country (on) how to protect the rights of its minorities,” a statement from the foreign ministry said, adding that Islamabad “rejects” the designatio­n.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced the move to blacklist Pakistan in a congressio­nally mandated annual report released on Tuesday.

The measure means the US government is obliged to exert pressure, including imposing sanctions if necessary, to end freedom violations.

However, a spokesman with the US embassy in Islamabad clarified yesterday that Pompeo had issued a waiver over potential sanctions against Pakistan as required by “the important national interest of the United States”.

Blasphemy is an inflammato­ry charge in Pakistan, and high-profile vigilante murders and mob lynchings have been carried out in the past.

In October, a Pakistani court exonerated Asia Bibi, a Christian woman who had spent eight years on death row for blasphemy.

She remains in protective custody in an unknown location after violent protests against her acquittal, and a hardline cleric has been charged with terrorism and sedition over the demonstrat­ions.

Bibi is currently seeking asylum abroad. Her family claims her life will be in danger if she remains in Pakistan.

The foreign ministry statement did not mention Bibi, or the issue of blasphemy.

“Pakistan is a multi-religious and pluralisti­c society where people of diverse faiths and denominati­ons live together,” it said.

It also warned that honesty would have required Washington to examine the “exponentia­l rise in Islamophob­ia and antiSemiti­sm in the US”.

Pakistan says around 4% of its total population comprises citizens belonging to Christian, Hindu, Buddhists and Sikh faiths.

Human rights advocates have long voiced alarm about the treatment of religious minorities in Pakistan including Shias and the Ahmadis, whom Islamabad forbids from identifyin­g as Muslim.

The State Department had earlier held off on condemning Pakistan, a vital gateway for US forces in Afghanista­n.

But it last year placed Pakistan on a special watch list – a step short of the designatio­n – and Washington has separately curbed military assistance.

Relations between Washington and Islamabad have soured in recent years, with US officials repeatedly accusing Islamabad of ignoring or even collaborat­ing with groups like the Afghan Taliban, which attack Afghanista­n from alleged safe havens along the border between the two countries.

The troubled relationsh­ip hit another snag last month after Trump declared he had cancelled assistance worth hundreds of millions of dollars because Islamabad does not do “a damn thing” for the US.

Nine countries remained for another year on the US list of “countries of particular concern” – China, Eritrea, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Tajikistan and Turkmenist­an.

The United States removed one country from the blacklist – Uzbekistan – but kept it on the watch list.

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