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Home > 2001 > July (Web-only)Christianity Today, July (Web-only), 2001  |   |  
Pakistani Christians Fight Against 'Apartheid' in Election System
"Under rule, citizens cannot vote for candidates outside their own religious affiliation."



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Christian leaders in Pakistan have gained ground in a campaign against an election system that identifies voters by religion and, they claim, discriminates against religious minorities.

The Pakistani Supreme Court recently ruled that Christians may contest the post of village or district council head, a judgment that chips away at the nation's current voting system and in effect supports the notion of more voting rights for religious minorities, Christian activists claimed.

Elected representatives chose heads of more than 5000 village and municipal councils on August 2.

Although the nation's highest court did not endorse Christian demands for a complete abolition of the election system, Christian church leaders welcomed the ruling.

"We are happy that [the court] has taken note of the injustice we are facing," said Catholic priest Bonnie Mendis, a leader of the ecumenical Christian Organization for Social Action in Pakistan (COSAP). "It is for the government to give us equal rights as citizens."

Pakistan's separate electorate system (SES) was imposed in 1979 under General Zia-ul Haq's martial rule. Under the system, citizens cannot vote for candidates outside their own religious affiliation: Muslim voters can only vote for Muslim candidates, Christians for Christian candidates and Hindus for Hindu candidates. About 3 million of Pakistan's population of 140 million are Christian; approximately 97 percent of the nation is Muslim.

At the national level, 10 seats out of 217 at the National Assembly are reserved for religious minorities—four for Christians, four for Hindus and two for people of other religions.

Under SES, recently concluded village council elections permitted Christians voters a single vote as compared with five votes each for Muslim voters, who were able to vote for a range of posts on the council such as those for women and labour leaders.

The village council head is chosen from among the elected members of the village council. The supreme court ruling means that Christians who have been elected to village councils may now contest this post, something that had previously been ruled out by election officials as contravening SES.

Victor Azariah, general secretary of the National Council of Churches of Pakistan (NCCP), welcomed the Supreme Court ruling, but said, "Christians can rejoice over it only when the government and the election commission abolish the separate electorate system. The judgment should be turned into law to end this discrimination."

The NCCP is a forum of non-Catholic Christians in Pakistan comprising the Church of Pakistan, Presbyterian Church, Salvation Army and Association of Reformed Churches.

The NCCP and the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Pakistan had called for a boycott of the local body elections—which were held in four phases from December to July—as a protest against the separate electorate.

Concerned that the campaign might garner political sympathy, the government tried to stop the boycott by extending the filing date for minority candidates and putting pressure on Christian politicians not to withdraw their candidacy, Father Mendis said.

But the campaign picked up steam, garnering political support at a convention organized in June by the National Commission for Justice and Peace of the Catholic Bishops' Conference in Lahore. Representatives of more than a dozen major political parties endorsed the Christian activists' demand for dismantling the SES.

"No one has the right to discriminate against minorities because of their religious identity," Imran Khan, head of the Tehrik-I-Insaf party, said at the convention.





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