Saleem
Masih, a 22 year-old Christian labourer from the city of Kasur, south of
Lahore, Pakistan, has died of injuries sustained when he was beaten by four men
who accused him of “contaminating” a well of water by bathing in it.
Masih
took a bath on 25 February after a day’s work unloading husk from the field in
which he worked and was accused by the landowners of contaminating the well on
their property. The attack against him took place in the same city where brick
kiln labourers and married couple Shehzad and Shama Masih were lynched and burned to death in November 2014 for allegedly committing
blasphemy by burning the pages of the Quran.
Local
sources have told CSW that Saleem Masih was restrained with chains, dragged and
beaten with rods by the landowner, who has been identified as Sher Dogar, and
four other men. He died from severe injuries to his organs on 28 February at a
general hospital.
Christian
communities from lower income groups who work in rural areas holding jobs in sanitation,
brick kilns or as daily wage farm labourers, for example, live with the stigma
of being “chuhra” (dirty) and are subject
to daily
discrimination, due
in part to the legacy of the caste system.
Local
monitoring groups continue to raise concerns about the social ostracism that
these communities endure and the deeply ingrained prejudices that land and
business owners have against them. CSW has found that religious minorities also
experience discrimination in schools, where children as young as 12 being instructed to “eat, sit and
play separately from other students.”
Michelle
Chaudhry, President of Cecil and Iris Chaudhry Foundation (CICF), said: “This horrific act of
violence is once again a grim
reminder that intolerance in the name of religion in Pakistan has escalated
beyond the rule of law. Unfortunately, in
Pakistan, when it comes to the religious minorities anyone is free
to act as a prosecutor, judge and executor. We cannot allow this to go on; impunity
around violence against religious minorities in Pakistan has to end.”
“We demand of the governments both federal and provincial to ensure the safety and protection of all non-Muslim Pakistanis as enshrined in the constitution of the country. Incidents such as these send a wave of insecurity which leaves communities feeling extremely vulnerable. It is the State’s responsibility to protect its citizens regardless of faith, caste or gender. Furthermore, accountability is pivotal in order to prevent such violence in the future. We demand that an impartial inquiry is carried out and that the perpetrators are brought to justice.”
CSW’s Chief Executive Mervyn Thomas said: “We extend our deepest condolences to the family of Saleem Masih. It is unacceptable that Christians in Pakistan still face discrimination and hatred on account of their religious identity. The government of Pakistan must take decisive action against the perpetrators of hate and those who carry out such crimes. We also urge the authorities to fully commit to the long-term work of overcoming the prejudiced mindset towards religious minorities in society.”