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Pakistan Failed to Protect Religious Freedom: US

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INDIAPOSITIVE

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WASHINGTON: The US today lashed out at the Pakistan government for its failure to prosecute those responsible for religious freedom abuses, saying such environment encourages intolerance and acts of violence.

"In Pakistan, the government's general failure to investigate, arrest or prosecute those responsible for religious freedom abuses promoted an environment of impunity.

This environment fostered further intolerance and acts of violence," the State Department said in its annual report on International Religious Freedom report for the year 2014.

"Government policies also failed to protect members of majority and minority religious groups," said the report released by Secretary of State John Kerry.

"In addition, the persistent use of discriminatory legislation, such as blasphemy laws, including the government’s failure to address false accusations of blasphemy and laws designed to delegitimize the Ahmadiyya Muslim community, meant that minorities were often afraid to profess freely their religious beliefs," the report said.

The Supreme Court announced a detailed judgment regarding minorities' rights on June 20, in accordance with which the government created a National Commission for Minorities with representatives of various faith groups, it noted.

However, other recommendations from the judgment have yet to be implemented, such as establishment of a police task force to protect minorities, revision of school curricula to promote religious and social tolerance, and steps to discourage hate speech in social media, the report said.

It said discrimination against Christians, Hindus, Sikhs, and Ahmadis in admission to higher education institutions persisted. Minority leaders reported their communities faced restrictions in securing admissions into colleges and universities.

Sikh leaders said that in some instances, Sikh students were required to obtain a certificate of permission from the Evacuee Trust Property Board which was a lengthy process that discouraged them from pursuing higher education, it said.

According to reports from the Jinnah Institute and other organizations, public school curricula included derogatory statements in textbooks about minority religious groups, particularly Ahmadis, Hindus, Jews, and Christians and the teaching of religious intolerance was widespread, it noted.

According to a 2013 report by the human rights NGO National Commission for Justice and Peace, hate material in school curricula was the main reason for discrimination towards minority groups.

Examining textbooks for the 2012-13 academic years in Punjab and Sindh for grades 1 to10, the report found the curricula included discriminatory and inflammatory material against Hindus, Christians, and other religious minorities.


Pakistan Failed to Protect Religious Freedom: US -The New Indian Express
 
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US Failed to protect their Schools and Colleges from shooters.
 
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Why does US make such reports.
To hide their own faults.

That's because lot of people from these countries try to settle their political scores on US soil. Then when we develop an opinion, the losing side cries like a teenage baby !
Yes, crying teenage baby with a loaded gun killing blacks here and Asians there.
 
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To hide their own faults.


Yes, crying teenage baby with a loaded gun killing blacks here and Asians there.

Huh ? So ? Pray kindly open such cases on your own soil. See if the world gives any fcuk to it. !!
 
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US judge throws out 'genocide' lawsuit against Indian prime minister Narendra Modi
US government argued he was entitled to immunity from accusations surrounding anti-muslim riots in 2002 as he is a sitting head of government



Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had been accused in a lawsuit of “attempted genocide” over deadly anti-Muslim riots in 2002. Judge Analisa Torres threw out the suit. Photograph: Findlay Kember/AFP/Getty Images


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A US judge on Wednesday dismissed a lawsuit against Indian Prime MinisterNarendra Modi that accused him of “attempted genocide” over deadly anti-Muslim riots in 2002.

New York judge Analisa Torres threw out the suit on the grounds that Modi is not under her court’s jurisdiction after the US government argued he was entitled to immunity as a sitting head of government.

The American Justice Centre, a human rights group, filed the civil suit against Modi in September, accusing him of initiating and condoning the massacre and holding him responsible for the deaths.

The outbreak of anti-Muslim violence left at least 1,000 people dead in 2002 in the western state of Gujarat, where Modi was then chief minister before he was elected prime minister in 2014.


Modi denies any wrongdoing and the Indian courts have cleared him of all charges.

But the failure of his administration to control the violence and his refusal to apologise left a legacy of distrust and suspicion.

The judge’s order to close the case came two weeks before US President Barack Obama is to be guest of honour at India’s Republic Day celebrations on 26 January.

There was no immediate response from the American Justice Center.

The lawsuit had been filed one day before Modi visited New York and Washington for the first time as Indian leader.

The 28-page complaint claimed that Modi committed crimes against humanity, extra-judicial killings, torture and the infliction of mental and physical trauma on victims, mostly Muslims.

Modi, a Hindu nationalist, was blocked from obtaining a US visa in 2005 over the allegations, which he has always denied.

But Obama gave him to a lavish welcome at the White House in September. At the time officials said the suit would not detract from the determination of both sides to forge closer relations.

The United States and European powers boycotted Modi for more than a decade after the riots, but have largely embraced him after his Bharatiya Janata Party won a landslide election victory.

US Secretary of State John Kerry held talks with Modi in India on the sidelines of a major trade summit on Sunday, hailing him as a “visionary” poised to transform the Indian economy.
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So,where is American justice?now they are trying to closely monitor our text books,interpreted them with respect to their own versions and tell us that we are not doing justice?Meanwhile on the other hand,their president praises Mr.Modi and their court frees all such allegations?
These people and their new world can lure and fool weak minds,but they must remember that not every soul can be controlled.We all are drawings on a board called ''universe'' and all of us,no matter who we are...shall pay our price one day.Some of us are now and some will in future.
The thread has served it's purpose.


regards
 
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