Gulf News

Islamabad rejects US blacklist

OFFICIALS DEFEND TREATMENT OF MINORITIES AND SAY BRANDING IS ‘POLITICALL­Y MOTIVATED’

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

“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. The statement came a day after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that he had designated Pakistan among “countries of particular concern” in a congressio­nally mandated annual report.

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

Asia Bibi case

It comes more than 40 days after 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. Blasphemy is an inflammato­ry charge in Pakistan, and high-profile vigilante murders and mob lynchings have been carried out in the past.

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

Pakistan recently charged a hardline cleric, Khadim Hussain Rizvi, with terrorism and sedition after he led violent protests against Bibi’s acquittal.

The foreign ministry statement did not mention her, 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 anti-Semitism in the US”.

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

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