Hehehe.. orang Islam nyulik dan merkosa cewek Kristen, malak, ngerampok, 
ngebantai orang Kristen. Betul2 sangat Islami
 
01/17/2012 
SOS Pakistan: The Vatican raises the alarm over the Christian situation
 
First the Pontifical Mission Societies, then Vatican Radio. The Pope also 
reminded diplomats that the situation is getting very seriousGiacomo Galeazzi
vatican city 
 
In his message to the 180 accredited ambassadors at the Roman Curia, which 
commemorated the martyrdom of the Catholic Shahbaz Bhatti, Federal Minister for 
Religious Minorities (killed on 2 March of last year for his opposition to the 
blasphemy law and his defense of Asia Bibi, a Christian woman sentenced to 
death for this reason), Benedict XVI openly voiced his concern. Now the Holy 
See comes more to the point, drawing international attention to religious 
persecution in the Muslim-majority country, denouncing the rape and torture of 
Christian children, extortion of families, abuse and violence that take place 
in silence - and in the terror of the victims. 
  
Through its media channels, the Vatican denounced the violence and abuses that 
are taking place in the Christian communities of some suburban neighborhoods in 
Karachi, the largest city in southern Pakistan and capital of Sindh province. 
Michael Javed, Catholic parliamentarian active in Sindh, spoke out for the 
religious minority subjected to cruel persecution, and, through Vatican Radio 
and Fides news agency, issued a dramatic warning: for months, Christians in the 
Essa Nagri, Ayub Goth, and Bhittaiabad neighborhoods have been the victims of 
unspeakable violence perpetrated by members of political movements with strong 
Islamic and ethnic connotations, such as the Pashtuns. Christian families are 
living through an ordeal, but “people do not report abuse, for fear of 
retaliation.” Just last month, Javed told Fides, “We recorded 15 cases of 
rape.” 
  
In Essa Nagri there are genuine “torture cells” where girls - and Christian 
girls - are raped and confined. “They demand a ransom of up to 100,000 rupees 
for them, and if the families cannot pay, the little girls are tortured beyond 
recognition.” As a result of such violence, many families have chosen to leave 
Karachi over the last six months. “The purpose of such violence is to eliminate 
Christian presence in the area, a sort of ethnic cleansing: we are considered 
slaves, unworthy to tread on Pakistani soil.” In another reported case, a 
brothel was opened near a Catholic church in Ayub Goth, and “Christian girls 
from poor families are being forced into prostitution.” The authorities, though 
informed, have not acted yet. Javed made a desperate appeal to the world “to 
stop the oppression of our community.” Fides contacted Fr. Victor John, a 
Franciscan from the diocese of Karachi, pastor at Essa Nagri (where 700 
Christian families are
 living, 300 of them Catholic) and pastor for the area of ​​Ayub Goth (with 
about 300 Christian families): “These are very poor neighborhoods, infested 
with crime and lawlessness. Violence and torture are committed by members of 
Islamic political parties who blackmail people for political consensus, but 
also by militants who are hostile to the faithful. Drug trafficking is rife in 
the area and the police remain complacent. 
  
“They lack schools and social services and, in this atmosphere of poverty, 
violence reigns.” Meanwhile, blasphemy laws are spreading, imposing death 
sentences or life imprisonment for displaying lack of respect for the Prophet 
Muhammad and the Quran. “The Church,” Michael Javed continues, “is present in 
the schools with a drug rehabilitation center, with the work of the Sisters of 
Mother Teresa and the Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. We 
provide our services particularly to children and young people, trying to help 
them, to educate them to avoid becoming involved in crime.” Pakistan's 
Conference of Bishops complains that the 2.5 million Christians in the country 
are increasingly exposed to violence and intimidation by people “whose 
mentality is focusing progressively on an extreme form of Islam.” And, they 
add: “Our people fear for the future - people perceive themselves as second 
rate citizens. We cannot speak. We feel
 oppressed and repressed.” Accusing the government of having failed to 
effectively oppose fundamentalism, the Pakistani bishops warn that the 
situation is now “precarious.” Increased security measures have been 
implemented in Christian buildings. The Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Lahore 
is under police surveillance, with video cameras, concrete barriers, sandbags, 
and walls. Before 1986, there were no allegations of blasphemy in Pakistan. In 
addition, about 1,000 cases have occurred over a period of 20 years, while 70 
people, accused only of blasphemy, have been victims of extrajudicial 
executions. Recently, an American commission on religious freedom published a 
report showing how children in Pakistani schools are indoctrinated into 
intolerance towards minorities. The results were supported by the Director of 
the Dominican Center in Lahore, who demanded an urgent reform of the education 
system in Pakistan. 
  
The government study, published by the Commission on International Religious 
Freedom (USCIFR), revealed that public schools in Pakistan and Islamic 
religious schools (known as “madrassas”) negatively depict religious minorities 
and reinforce prejudices, fomenting acts of discrimination and possible 
violence against these communities. According to the report, a significant 
minority of the thousands of religious schools or madrassas continue to 
inculcate ideological indoctrination and to incite those who take part in the 
religious-inspired violence in Pakistan and in other countries. The Holy See, 
on the one hand, asks the government for urgent action to stop the false 
accusations of blasphemy, the hate speech, and impunity for acts of violence 
against religious minorities; while on the other hand, it urges the government 
to invest resources and energy in improving interfaith relations and promote a 
genuine and comprehensive reform of the education
 system in the country. Religious freedom in Pakistan is conditioned “by the 
dark shadows of Islamic extremism,” but also by the intolerance, lawlessness, 
and impunity growing in the country. And it is not just the Vatican that is 
speaking out in defense of religious minorities in Pakistan. Even the latest 
report published by the NGO “Christian Solidarity Worldwide” (CSW) describes 
the “grave situation in Pakistan.” The NGO reports that religious violence does 
not spare Sufi sanctuaries and the “Ahmadi” group, considered a sect of Islam: 
all minorities are struggling to seek justice and respect for their fundamental 
rights.   

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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