What's new

Ahmadis in Pakistan face unfair election

Status
Not open for further replies.

Fuego

BANNED
Joined
Jun 28, 2012
Messages
392
Reaction score
0
On May 11th, the world’s second most populous Muslim country Pakistan, will mark a historic election.

The country’s 66-year history is marred by the presence of martial laws and never before has one
elected government replaced another. As Pakistanis rush to the polling stations to cast their vote, over 4 million people will sit home,
separated and disenfranchised.

They are the members of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, a peaceful sect within Islam, who are
the victims of this “separate but equal” electorate in Pakistan; a system rooted in religious discrimination.

Since the inception of Pakistan in 1947 to up until 1984, all Pakistanis voted on a joint electorate. Then Ahmadis were separated from the
mainstream in 1974 when Z. A. Bhutto appeased the clerics by constitutionally declaring them
“not Muslims.” A decade later, Zia-ul-Haq, Pakistan’s military dictator, issued Ordinance XX, further silencing the Ahmadis who could then be imprisoned for up to three years for simply using Islamic terminology like “Assalamu alaikum”
meaning “peace be upon you.”

In 1985, as a step towards pseudo-Islamization of the nation, Zia imposed a separate electorate for all religious minorities, including the Ahmadis, who were required to declare themselves non-Muslims in order to gain the limited right to vote
for only the 5 percent minority seats of National Assembly.

Ahmadis saw such a self-declaration as a dissociation with Prophet Muhammad. “That’s too high a price to pay for our fundamental right
to vote” – they said and sat out during the next election.

In 2001, United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIR) called for an end to anti-Ahmadi discrimination in Pakistan. As the diplomatic pressure mounted,
General Pervaiz Musharraf, proposed a joint electorate in January 2002. Millions of Ahmadis - including members of my family – were overjoyed at the prospects of enjoying equal voting rights
but then came the religious hardliners, questioning the general’s loyalty to his faith. Musharraf caved into the demands – allowing the
Christian, Hindu and other minorities to vote on the joint electorate – but created a supplementary voter list only for the Ahmadis. In the upcoming May 11th elections, all Pakistani voters are required to check off their religion on Form 2 (Annex IV). Christians, Hindus, and other minorities can simply check their respective box and vote. But Muslim voters are also made to
sign a declaration on the reverse side of the form, rejecting the founder of Ahmadiyya Muslim Community as a false prophet. Ahmadis are left with only one option: self declare themselves non-
Muslims by using the supplemental voting sheet.

That’s a no-go scenario for a community that calls itself the renaissance of Islam. Ahmadis are fully aware of the facts and the
consequences. During the 2008 elections, the victory margin in 88 out of the 272 national constituencies was less than 10,000 votes. The Ahmadi voting bloc could be decisive in such races. By protesting against this “separate
but equal” system Ahmadis brace for a further squeeze by politicians who see no electoral incentive in protecting their human rights.

Yet, some do stand up for justice as a moral imperative. In April 2013, 33 members of the U.S.

Congress signed a joint letter to the Secretary of State John Kerry regarding the denial of Ahmadi
voting rights in Pakistan. They indicated that if Pakistani Ahmadis are not included in the joint electorate they will not be able to endorse the results of May 11th elections.

Many of those of Pakistani descent who live in the United States maintain their Pakistani
citizenship and have the right to vote in May 11th elections as oversees citizens. I call upon their
conscience to renounce Pakistan’s “separate but equal” electorate by demanding a new presidential
order. Unless that happens, the claims of a fair or historic election is a sham.

Washington Post
 
.
Trash. How can it be unfair when the boycott every single election since 1985 by choice.

There are multiple threads running on the same topic.
 
.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest posts

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom