Pakistan condemns BJP govt’s act of distorting facts

RECORDER REPORT

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan categorically rejected, once again, the Indian government and senior BJP leadership’s baseless allegations of persecution of minorities in the country and the factually incorrect claims that population of religious minorities in Pakistan has declined from 23 percent in 1947 to 3.7 percent in 2011.

“While using the 1941 census data, this Indian falsehood deliberately and mischievously omits references to two major subsequent developments, i.e. mass migration during the Partition in 1947 and separation of East Pakistan (today’s Bangladesh) in 1971,” Foreign Office Spokesperson Dr Mohammad Faisal said, adding that both these developments had an impact on the percentage of the minority population in Pakistan.

In actual fact, he pointed out that the percentage of minorities in Pakistan, formerly West Pakistan, has increased over the past decades. This is borne out conclusively by the available census data in Pakistan, he added. According to the first Census in Pakistan (1951), the total population of minorities in West Pakistan (today’s Pakistan) was 3.12 percent, which increased up to 3.72 percent by 1998.

Subsequent censuses held in Pakistan also reflect an overall increase in the share of minorities: 2.96 percent in second census (1961); 3.25 percent in third census (1972); 3.33 percent in fourth census (1981); and 3.72 percent in fifth census (1998). The 1998 Census data further show that the Hindu population of Pakistan increased from around 1.5 percent (in 1951) to nearly 2 percent in 1998.

“Pakistan, therefore, condemns the distortion of facts by the BJP government and leadership to justify the discriminatory legislation like Citizenship (Amendment) Act. This attempt, however, is not surprising in view of the smear campaign against Pakistan, being waged by the Indian government, based on falsehoods and aimed at misleading its own people as well as the international community,” Dr Faisal said.

He said that the Indian government’s claims are also an attempt to cover up its systematic efforts to marginalize and disenfranchise India’s religious and social minorities, particularly Muslims.

“India’s pretensions of casting itself as a ‘haven’ for minorities are completely devoid of any credibility. The rising wave of “Hindutva” under the BJP government has led to rapid political, economic and social victimization of Muslims and other religious and social minorities, including Dalits,” he said, adding that the continued incarceration and persecution of 8 million unarmed and innocent Kashmiris in IOJ&K is further manifestation of this blatantly extremist mindset posing a serious threat to regional security.

He asserted that the discriminatory steps and vicious propaganda by the RSS-BJP combine only further expose its real face and sinister agenda of transforming India into a “Hindu Rashtra.”

He pointed out that the international community is already taking cognizance and many –including the international media, civil society organizations, the UN Secretary General, and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights – have expressed their concerns regarding the NRC (National Register of Citizens) and the CAA (Citizenship Amendment Act) and the subsequent developments.

”The world would hold India to account and expect it to fulfill its responsibilities under international law,” he added.