 | http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_21-1-2005_pg3_4
The Daily Times, Lahore, Pakistan Friday, January 21, 2005
By Khaled Ahmed
In Pakistan, the passports had to carry an entry on religion only to trap one community, the Qadianis or Ahmedis. There is some shame attached to this collective act of savagery embedded in the 1973 Constitution as an amendment, proving once again that democracy in our part of the world is not really democratic. Most laws made against the Ahmedis have victimised Christians and Muslims, but who cares? The shame is hidden behind a euphemism called Khatm-e-Nabuwwat, which in our country means 'apostatise the Ahmedis and then hunt them down'. But why put it in the passport meant for outside? .....
...... Chief of the ruling PML Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain called for the restoration of the entry of religion in the passport first, followed by the religion minister, Mr Ijaz ul Haq, whose father had put it in the passport. He admits that there was no entry of religion in the passports of other Islamic states, but in Pakistan Khatm-e-Nabuwwat (apostatisation of the Ahmedis) was important, which necessitated the entry. The oaths of prime minister and the president contained reference to Khatm-e-Nabuwwat. The 'religion entry' was there in the application form of the passport. ...... When the passports continued to be issued without the entry, the MMA observed a Protest Day where no one turned up, showing that the masses for whom the entry was sought did not care about it.
MMA claimed that the entry had been made mandatory because the parliament had passed an amendment against the Qadianis. Did not the Quran say that no non-Muslim should enter the city of Mecca? Therefore Pakistan must point it out in the passport. The truth is that every haji who goes to Mecca has to say on a Saudi form whether he is a Muslim or not.
The MMA has claimed that the Americans have got Musharraf to remove the religion entry, yet the ID card didn't carry it without American pressure. The PPP had apostatised the Ahmedis but it did not put that in the passports; General Zia did. Bhutto wanted to be popular; General Zia wanted to be even more popular. Both died unnatural deaths and today most of the people who love religion don't mourn them for different reasons. .....
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