The SC then turned its attention to the registration of Christian marriages in Punjab, and the Acting Advocate General told the Court that in future Christian marriages were to be registered in each union council under the local government Act of 2001, and in doing so ‘tidied up’ a number of anomalies that have been bones of contention for years. Licences to solemnise and register marriages were granted to 155 priests and pastors. Different faiths have widely varying marriage customs and observance. The Hindu community, in particular, has had protracted difficulties with registering births, marriages and deaths. Ironing out the anomalies, however, is unlikely to immediately solve the problems, as provincial administrations rarely move quickly when it comes to the protection of the rights of minorities. There are substantial Christian population in both Sindh and Punjab. In Sindh alone, there are 620 temples, eight Sikh gurdwaras and 540 churches with 1,722 personnel deployed to protect them — and at least, as many again in Punjab. The minority population of Pakistan present zero threat to the majority, yet they are consistently targeted with abductions, forced conversions and discrimination in recruitment practices in both the public and private sectors. The SC has gone some way to righting a number of wrongs and is to be applauded for doing so, but much remains to be done.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 6th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (7)
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@Feroz: Muslim population in India is 177 millions as much as Pakistan and second in the world with soaring birth rate, still wants to claim minority!!!!
@Zaid Hamid: This is being successfully implanted but elsewhere in the world this 'minority' wags the dog under the guise of secularism.
@Zaid Hamid: as long as the "majority" can beat up and rob a "minority" there will always be those eager to create a minority. It doesn't have to be religion; it could even be those people who break their eggs at the big end rather than the small one.
What minority? What rights?
@John B: As part of India the minority Muslims wanted special rights, after Partition when Constitution of Pakistan was framed the Muslims gave themselves special rights, while cleverly using the word "equality" selectively here and there in the Constitution. Secular when in minority, never when in majority. Everything can change except mindset, it seems.