Two Pakistani Christians were killed and at least three injured in a drive-by shooting on Sunday in Essa Nagri, a Christian-majority area in Quetta, capital of the impoverished Balochistan province in the south-west.
The victims, aged 19 and 28, had just left a Seventh-day Adventist church service when they were gunned down by two men on a motorcycle. At least three other churchgoers were injured, reported the Catholic news agency UCAN.
On 17th December at least 11 people died and dozens were injured during a suicide attack on the Bethel Methodist Church in Quetta, Pakistan. PICTURE: World Watch Monitor
The assault, like the attack two weeks ago that killed four Catholics, was claimed by Islamic State.
Quetta has been the scene of multiple violent attacks perpetuated by Islamist militants and separatists in recent years.
The ongoing violence directed at religious minorities in Pakistan, including Shia and Ahmadi Muslims as well as Christians, was criticised by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) in its 2017 report, published on Monday.
The HRCP said that the while Pakistan had become an elected member of the United Nations Human Rights Council, its government “has failed miserably to protect minority members against attacks and discrimination”.
“Extremist forces bent on creating an exclusive Islamic identity for Pakistan appear to have been given a free hand. A few hundred fanatics held the capital and the garrison cities hostage for 23 days in Faizabad, Islamabad in November this year until their demands were accepted. In ceding to the demands of the violent demonstrators, the state has virtually given blanket licence to fundamentalism and militancy in the name of religion,” it said.
The HRCP said Christians in Pakistan fall victim to crimes such as murder, bombings, abduction of women, rape, forced conversions, and eviction from home and country. It also noted how “fake cases under blasphemy laws are regularly used to terrorise Christians” – as World Watch Monitor has reported in the cases of Sawan Masih, Patras and Sajid Masih, Nadeem James and Asia Bibi.
In March Pakistan’s Senate Special Committee on Human Rights recommendedthat those who falsely accuse someone of blasphemy should receive the same punishment as those convicted of blasphemy. But there has been violent opposition from Islamist groups to any change to the laws.