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WASHINGTON, Feb 8
2010 Samaa TV: The Pakistani government plans to
revise its laws against blasphemy within this year,
Minority Affairs Minister Shahbaz Bhatti said on Sunday.
Bhatti said religious reconciliation was a
little-noticed priority for President Asif Ali Zardari's
civilian government in Pakistan, which lies on the
frontline of the US-led war against Islamic extremism.
Bhatti, a longtime Roman Catholic activist whose
position was given full cabinet status for the first
time, said he was speaking with political parties to
present revisions to the blasphemy law by the end of
2010.
"This is a democratic government which has a commitment
to repeal all the discriminatory laws affecting the
rights of minorities," Bhatti told AFP in an interview
in Washington.
"We are using military action to fight terrorism and we
are using economic opportunities, but another thing
which is important is that we are pursuing interfaith
harmony," he said.
Bhatti said that while he did not envision an immediate
repeal of blasphemy laws, the revision would require
judges to investigate cases before they are registered
-- creating oversight of the police, who are often
accused of abuse.
The revised law would also assign punishment equivalent
to that under the blasphemy laws for anyone who makes a
false complaint, he said.
Bhatti was in Washington to attend the National Prayer
Breakfast, an annual Christian-organized gathering
drawing national leaders. He also met with US lawmakers,
the US Commission on International Religious Freedom and
Richard Holbrooke, the US special envoy to Afghanistan
and Pakistan.
Pakistan's law against blaspheming Islam carries the
death penalty. While no one has ever been sent to the
gallows for the crime, activists say the law is used to
exploit others out of personal enmity or business
disputes.
In June last year, blasphemy allegations led to mob
violence against Christians in Punjab that caused
hundreds to flee, according to the US State Department's
annual report on religious freedom around the world.
The report said there was particular discrimination
against the Ahmadiya community, which Pakistan considers
non-Muslim as adherents do not believe Mohammed was the
last prophet.
In another incident in September, a 25-year-old
Christian jailed on blasphemy allegations died in
prison. Activists suspected he was tortured, but
authorities said he committed suicide.
Pakistan, founded in 1947 as a Muslim homeland during
the bloody partition of British India, is overwhelmingly
Muslim. Religious minorities however form some five
percent of the population, according to government
figures.
Among Muslims, strong tensions also persist between the
majority Sunni and the minority Shiite sects. Bombings
on Friday killed 33 people in Karachi, including an
attack near a bus carrying people to a Shiite
procession.
In UN bodies, Pakistan has butted heads with Western
democracies by sponsoring resolutions on fighting
"religious defamation.”
But Bhatti vowed to make progress at home. In December,
the government launched a drive to set up more than 120
"district interfaith harmony committees" around Pakistan
to help resolve conflicts surrounded minorities.
Bhatti said he has personally visited religious
communities around the country including more than 30
madrassas, or Islamic schools, to encourage tolerance.
While he said he met a positive reception, Bhatti was
under no illusions about his safety, saying he has faced
death threats.
"When I started this struggle I said that I would not
compromise on the principle of religious freedom and
human equality," he said.
"These principles are the nucleus of my life. I will
live for them and I will die for them.”
PPC CONDEMNS BHATTI'S STATEMENT: Meanwhile, Dr. Nazir S
Bhatti, President of Pakistan Christian Congress PCC
clarified that Shahbaz Bhatti, Federal Minister for
Minorities is not elected by voters as member of
National Assembly of Pakistan but selected by Pakistan
Peoples Party PPP and speaks voice of his Muslim
masters.
20 million Pakistani Christians have always demanded
repeal of blasphemy law which has been misused by Muslim
groups in Pakistan against Christians.
PCC condemns announcement made by Shahbaz Bhatti in
Washington DC on his plans of revision in blasphemy law
in year 2010, said Nazir Bhatti.
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