 | http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/GA19Df06.html
Asia Times, Hong Kong Jan 19, 2005
New target for Pakistan's militants
Pakistan's Sunni militants, who were instrumental in bringing together the Afghan Taliban and Arab al-Qaeda organizations, have found fresh fodder in Pakistan. The militants' new target is the Ismailis, the followers of the Aga Khan.
In Pakistan's Northern Territories, which border China and Afghanistan and include a part of the disputed state of Jammu and Kashmir, Sunni militants shot and killed an Ismaili leader, Agha Ziauddin, on January 8. Ziauddin's killing, in Gilgit, sparked riots that left at least 15 dead. In December, two Sunni militants were arrested in connection with the killing of two employees of an Aga Khan aid agency in the remote northern town of Chitral bordering Afghanistan that same month.
The Ismailis are a branch of the Shi'ite Muslim sect that can be found in large numbers in Pakistan's Northern Territories, as well as in nearby Tajikistan's Pamir plateau. About 350,000 Ismailis live in Tajikistan and most of them reside in the Pamirs in the Gorno-Badkashan region of the country. In adjoining China's Xinjiang region, a large number of Ismailis live in virtual isolation from the Aga Khan-run international community.
Pakistan's Sunni militants, schooled in an orthodox Deobandi school of Islamic teaching, work hand-in-glove with the Wahhabis of Saudi Arabia. In fact, the political arm of the Sunni militants in Pakistan, the Jamaat-i-Islami (JII) and its student wing Islamic Jamiat Tulaba (IJT), are financed generously from Saudi Arabia. The JIl have been infiltrating the Pakistani military in large numbers since the 1980s, and played a very important role in bringing the Taliban militants to power in Afghanistan in 1996.
The killing of the Ismailis - who along with the Ahmadiyyas and Shi'ites are contemptuously considered heretics by orthodox Sunnis - was not carried out by JII cadres, but by any one of a number of Sunni terrorist groups, such as the Jaish-e-Mohammad, the Lashkar-e-Toiba or the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, among others. All of these groups function freely within Pakistan, despite bans "imposed" on them years ago by Islamabad.
Observers point out that the Northern Territory is strategically important; to the north is China, Tajikistan in its northwest, Afghanistan in the west and the disputed state of Jammu and Kashmir is in the east. For strategic reasons, since the 1980s, Islamabad has allowed a large number of Sunnis and Wahhabi Maulvis to settle in the area, causing more distress to the locals. Noteworthy is that while the latest round of killings were going on, President General Pervez Musharraf did no more than helplessly declare a curfew in Skardu and Gilgit. No attempt was made to bring the killers to justice. ..... ====================================================== [The famous Pakistani human rights lawyer and UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion and Belief, Asma Jehangir, during her recent visit to Dhaka, was interviewed by Inam Ahmed and Ashfaq Wares Khan of The Daily Star on the state of the religious minorities, specially Ahmadiyyas vis-a-vis human rights]
http://www.thedailystar.net/2005/01/18/d501181501111.htm
The Daily Star, Dhaka, Bangladesh Tuesday, January 18, 2005
Interview with Asma Jehangir Declaring Ahmadiyyas non-Muslim in Pakistan has serious repurcussion on civil liberty
Excerpts:
DS: How did Pakistan deal with the repression of Ahmadiyyas? AJ: In Pakistan, the issue was used by religious parties to use the emotion of the people to enrage them and build new constituencies. It became the foothold for the religious parties to gain entry into parliament and government institutions.
DS: How did it unfold? AJ: During the rule of President Zia-ul Haq, the military dictator, in 1984 Ordinance 20 was passed, for which the penal code was amended so any Ahmadiyyas who pretend to be a Muslim would be punished. For example, we had a number of what came to be known as "Assalamalaikum Cases" where Ahmadiyyas would be arrested for greeting another Pakistani by saying Assalamalaikum. The arrests ran into hundreds, if not thousands.
There were numerous cases like this, where Ahmadiyyas were not allowed to recite the Kalimas, they were not allowed to call their places of worship as Mosques. When it came to getting passports, members of the Ahmadiyya community had to sign a document declaring themselves as non-Muslims and their religion as a fake one. Everybody signed, of course, but the ones who refused to sign were arrested. The situation really degraded Ahmadiyyas in the society, and members of the community kept leaving the country.
DS: What really made the situation so degrading for the Ahmadiyyas? AJ: The situation kept worsening, and it really became derogatory for the Ahmadiyyas, when government high officials and even politicians were dubbed as Ahmadiyyas to harass them politically and socially. When the current Prime Minister of Pakistan Shaukat Aziz was called an Ahmadiyya he had to make a public announcement saying he is not one but a Muslim. The previous Chief Justice had to go to a Mosque and denounce his father who was an Ahmadiyya.
When such high officials go out in public and denounce Ahmadiyyas, it is quite derogatory for the members of the Ahmediyya community. Such an attitude extended itself to institutions and hostility grew there, they became untouchables and still are.
DS: What is the current state of the Ahmadiyyas in Pakistan? AJ: Well, as I said they are still treated as untouchables, people do not want to marry their children into Ahmadiyya families, there are widespread discriminations against them in the workplace. They are boxed in to their own isolated communities, in their own 'ghettos'.
But now, a very strong demand is out there in Pakistan to announce the Zikris non-Muslims and recently they have also turned against the Aga Khan community and are demanding that they be denounced as non-Muslims.
DS: You have said in other forums that the civil society in Pakistan did not do enough and are not doing enough to prevent these atrocities against the Ahmadiyya community. But was the repression under Zia's regime so severe that perhaps the civil society could not do anything? AJ: No, that is not the case. The movement against Zia-ul Haq was very strong, and not just by women who were fighting for their rights, but lawyers and journalists were being flogged for taking to the streets. But when it came to protesting against the minority repression, especially the Ahmadiyyas, there was an eerie and awkward silence. And I believe the civil society failed.
DS: Why would the religious parties turn their focus to labelling groups as non-Muslims, what did they stand to gain? AJ: It was a very, very good political gimmick for the religious parties in Pakistan. They wanted to make it an issue to show to the people that they have power and they can make the government do it. More importantly, they wanted to create new constituencies by fomenting these claims of non-Muslims and enraging the general people.
DS: How can we in Bangladesh protect religious freedoms? AJ: Guarantees by the government to protect their freedoms should be put in place. The freedom to practice and manifestations of their belief should be practiced as long as one group does not take away the rights from anyone else.
DS: What do you think about the civil society here in Bangladesh? AJ: I think it is a much more vibrant civil society here than the one we have in Pakistan. You are lucky you do not have the military here. But democracy here is a transitional one, and it started off at the same time as the transitional democracies in Nepal and Pakistan between the years 1988 and 1991. However, look what has happened there, their democracies have been reversed while yours still exist. What I say is to strengthen that democracy through independent judiciary, effective parliament, free media and a vibrant civil society. You cannot let democracy stagnate. ======================================================
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