On March 26, a Christian man named Suneel Saleem confronted medical staff after his pregnant sister was denied medical care. The medical staff and security guards at the Services Hospital in Lahore responded by beating him to death. The family remains under threat and is being pressured to withdraw the case against the medical staff.
Over the reporting period, Christians remained the target of Pakistan’s terrorist organizations. On April 2, terrorists connected to ISIS shot and killed a family of four Christians in Quetta. The family was shot as they were getting into an auto-rickshaw to attend an Easter celebration. The names of those who died were Firdous Emmanuel, Imran Masih, Tariq Masih, and Pervaiz Masih.
Two other Christians, Rashid Masih and Azhar Masih, were also killed by terrorists in Quetta on April 15. Two terrorists on a motorbike opened indiscriminate fire on a gathering of Christians on a street of a predominantly Christian neighborhood.
Christian places of worship were also targeted on several occasions over the past six months. A church run by the Gospel of Jesus Mission was set ablaze in Shahdara Town in Lahore on April 15, 2018. The alter, pulpit, dozens of Christian books, carpets, pedestal fans, plastic chairs, tables, wooden crosses, tarpaulin, and worship instruments were desecrated and reduced to ashes.
In January 2018, authorities identified and shut down six active house churches in the Abbottabad District of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. In June 2018, in Tobe Tek Singh, another church of the Full Gospel Assemblies faced intense opposition from their primarily Muslim village to the point of having to close down.
These examples are just a snapshot of the persecution that Christians in Pakistan have endured in the first six months of 2018 alone. Murders, kidnappings, forced conversions, forced marriages, attacks, discrimination, and church destruction are all issues that Pakistan’s authorities must address if Christians are to remain a part of the country’s national fabric. Until decisive action is taken, Christians in Pakistan will remain one of the most persecuted communities in the world.
For interviews with William Stark, Regional Manager, please contact Olivia Miller, Communications Coordinator: press@persecution.org