“Pakistan’s religious minorities have submitted a 10-point memorandum asking Prime Minister Imran Khan and his government to adopt policies to safeguard the rights of minorities and women.”

Pakistan is a state sponsor of jihad terror and has no interest in the human rights of religious minorities and women. The country is grounded in sharia and in its infamous blasphemy laws. As for Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan, he supports Pakistan’s abusive blasphemy laws that targets Christians, who often suffer from accusations that have no basis. Right after Khan was elected last year, he vowed to take his campaign against blasphemy to the United Nations and commented that “few in the West understand the pain caused to Muslims by such activities.” Khan also pressed the UN and OIC for international restrictions on speech in line with Islamic blasphemy laws.

Yet few in the West are willing to hold Pakistan accountable for its human rights abuses against Christians and other minorities. As for the UN, the UN Human Rights Council includes countries such as Somalia, Nigeria, Qatar, and Pakistan — a slap in the face to human rights. And in 2017, Saudi Arabia was elected to the UN women’s rights commission.

Last year, the Trump administration canceled $300,000,000 in aid to Pakistan because of its jihad terror record. That was a good start.

Hope remains grim for minorities in Pakistan (and other Islamic countries), yet in an era of globalist open-door immigration, these minorities are not prioritized.

“Pakistan’s religious minorities ask government for protection and rights,” by Robin Gomes, Vatican News, August 21, 2019: