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Discrimination Against Christians in the Workplace Remains Common in Pakistan

February 11, 2014 | Asia
February 11, 2014
AsiaPakistan

ICC Note:
Discrimination against Christians in the workplace in Pakistan remains a common practice in Pakistan. Many employers in the country’s Muslim-majority refuse to hire Christians and other religious minorities. When forced to do so, these employers often mistreat minority workers and even withhold their pay at times. In Gujrat, Naveed Maqsood, a Christian man employed at a local school, has been facing this persecution for years. The principle of the school, a Muslim woman, has refused to pay Maqsood for months because of his Christian identity.
2/11/2014 Pakistan (Asia News) – Fired from his job for being a Christian. This is what happens in Pakistan, in the city of Gujrat (Punjab province), where Naveed Maqsood has been waging a legal battle for over a year to put an end to the ongoing discrimination he has suffered at the hands of his boss, a Muslim woman, the principal of a state school. The man, aged 39, is the father of three young children and was employed as a driver.
The episode dates to August 16, 2012 when, thanks to government quotas reserved for minorities, Naveed was employed by the Government Special Education Center Sara-e-Alamgeer in Gujrat. Nargis Parveen, the principal of the institute, harbored a personal grudge against the Christian, and from December 2012 to September 2013 blocked – illegally – payment of his salary.
The man approached her to ask her to let him do his work on a regular basis, but the principal explained that the place assigned to him was “destined” for an acquaintance of hers and that she “did not like him because he is a member of a minority”. Failing to resolve the dispute, Naveed requested and was granted a transfer to Faisalabad, where he began working for the National Special Education Center. Meanwhile, the government ordered he be paid the wages he was due, but Nargis Parveen never put the man on the payroll.
The National Commission for Justice and Peace (NCJP) brought a case before a Lahore court on behalf of Naveed Maqsood. The court sent two subpoenas to the principal, but the woman never appeared before the judges. In January 2014 Naveed was called to testify in the presence of school authorities and the result was his dismissal.

[Full Story]

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