No citizen should feel like a minority on account of religion: CM Baqar

Says without pluralism and diversity, peace and prosperity shall elude us

KARACHI  -  The Caretaker Sindh Chief Minister (CM) Justice (retd) Maqbool Baqar speaking at a conference for Minority Rights said that no citizen should feel like a minority in their own country on account of religion. 

The CM said that he has always be­lieved that confronting uncomfort­able truths and introspection is the key to a better future. He added that conferences like these also have an­other crucial function: they reiterate our commitment to upholding the rights of non-Muslim citizens, par­ticularly their right to freely profess, practice, and propagate their faith. 

The conference was organised by the Department for Minorities Affairs in collaboration with the Pakistan Arts Council at its auditorium on Tuesday. “Today, fundamental rights and civil liberties are in jeopardy throughout the world as right-wing regimes at­tempt to further marginalise vulner­able communities,” the CM said and added that the Indian Supreme Court validated the regime’s decision to build a temple on the site of the Babri mosque. “At the same time, courts throughout Pakistan have done well to uphold religious liberties,” he said. Baqar said that in 2014, the Supreme Court took Suo motu cognisance of an attack on a church in Peshawar. While laying down clear directions for the protection of religious sites, the Su­preme Court held that “we are all members of one race of humans with common challenges, and we cannot confront these challenges without forging a common alliance. This para­digm shift in the world around us can be achieved at the international and domestic levels only by discouraging sectarian, racial and ethnic biases which are violative of shared values and fundamental rights, and by the promotion of and strict compliance with these values and rights”.

The CM said that in Salamat Man­sha’s case, the Supreme Court grant­ed bail to a person accused of offenc­es against religion. 

Maqbool Baqar said that the Su­preme Court in Salamat Mansha’s case also highlighted how such allegations were often leveled to settle personal scores and the tendency of violent mops to pronounce judgments be­fore the courts of law have declared a person guilty. “The significance of these judgments, however, exceeds their jurisprudential value,” he said and added that to the contrary, their significance was underscored by the court refusing to be swayed by the prevailing winds of extremism. Fur­thermore, judgments like these are also significant in assuring citizens that their rights do not rest on tenu­ous footings. Baqar said that unfor­tunately, extremism and bigotry have seeped across large segments of our population. He said that concerted efforts and forging alliances with pro­gressives would allow us to reverse the tide of violent extremism. 

The CM said that as a signatory to international conventions such as the ICCPR, we must take concrete steps towards broadening the fron­tiers of religious freedom. “The jour­ney ahead may seem arduous, but all monumental journeys begin with a single step,” he said and added that we must work for a pluralistic, demo­cratic, and progressive Pakistan - a Pakistan where none of us is a minor­ity, a Pakistan where our religious be­liefs do not inhibit the opportunities we get.

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