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Friday April 26, 2024

Call to honour Quaid’s vision of country

By Our Correspondent
August 11, 2020

LAHORE: Observing National Minorities Day, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has stated that both state and society must be true to Jinnah’s vision of a country in which religion or creed was a personal matter and no basis for differences of citizenship.

The HRCP called on the state to implement the 2014 Supreme Court judgment, which protects the right to manifest one’s religion or belief in private or public, free of coercion. A bold and pivotal step would be to modify the Constitution to reflect Jinnah’s August 11 speech, which as an address to the first Constituent Assembly, should be treated as policy direction rather than political rhetoric.

The HRCP demanded the government set up an autonomous statutory national commission for minorities’ rights to replace the ineffectual National Commission for Minorities reconstituted earlier this year. The Single National Curriculum, which violates the constitutional guarantee that no member of a religious minority will be required to ‘receive religious instruction’ not relevant to their own religion, must be revised to reflect that a uniform standard of education is not the same as a uniform curriculum.

The HRCP also demanded that the controversial and divisive Tahaffuz-e-Bunyad-e-Islam bill in Punjab be retracted, and the federal and provincial governments refrain from law-making that infringes any community’s right to freedom of religion or belief.