BY John Pontifex | January 12 2012 | 0 COMMENTS print
Protests in Pakistan after Government bulldozed Church-run centre and homes
Publication Date: 2012-01-12
Punjab government accused of ‘brutal injustice’ in likely land battle
A protest march took place in Pakistan yesterday morning, as the Punjab government in the country stands accused of ‘brutal injustice’ for sending bulldozers into a Church-owned site and demolishing homes for poor, elderly and homeless people, a school for poor girls and a church.
Poverty-stricken families living on the two-acre site in Lahore were woken at 6.30am on Tuesday and were asked to evacuate their homes. All the buildings on the site (above) were destroyed including a small church and at least seven houses—which still had the occupants’ belongings inside. With nowhere to go, a number of families and people working in the school camped out overnight on the demolished site, in the Garhi Shahu district of Lahore, the capital city of the Punjab Province.
Stating that the Church had proof of ownership of the site dating back to 1887, Catholic Bishop Sebastian Shaw of Lahore (below) condemned the state government of Punjab, accusing it of ‘carrying out a criminal act of land-grabbing.’ Speaking to Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), he said he had summoned priests of the diocese to a crisis meeting to prepare a High Court writ to reclaim the site.
“What the state government of Punjab has done is a very, very brutal act of injustice,” Bishop Shaw said. “How can they do such a thing, just to come in, wreck a charitable institution and ruin the lives of people living there? They do not listen to anybody.
“This is a criminal act of land-grabbing by the government functionaries.”
Warning of further government action to seize Church-owned property, he said: “Everybody is worried now that the state government and especially the ruling party in the Punjab Province [the Muslim League ‘N’] have their eye on our buildings and land.”
Dr Alexander John Malik, Anglican Bishop of Lahore, also condemned the demolition and demanded that the Punjab government rebuild what had been destroyed. He said that a Blasphemy Law case should be registered for the desecration of the Bibles, crosses and the church without prior ecclesiastical permission.
Saying that the Church had not received prior warning of the demolition plans, Fr Emmanuel Yousaf Mani, National Director of the Catholic Church’s National Commission for Justice and Peace (NCJP), spoke to ACN from the site.
“People are very sad,” he said. “They are very angry. They are still sitting in the place that they call home.
“We have the papers to show who the rightful owners of the site are.
“The government must have done something which was not correct to change the facts of the case.”
Fr Yousaf said that the site is still registered in the name of the Lahore Charitable Association, a trust made up of clergy and lay people from different Christian denominations with the Catholic Bishop of Lahore presiding as chairman.
He said that controversy over the ownership had arisen a few years ago when the main building on the site was used as a refuge for destitute women run by religious sisters. One of the women given refuge converted to Islam and began harassing the sisters and querying the rightful ownership of two rooms which she had occupied.
It is understood that the site is very valuable and that the state government is anxious to profit from it. Critics have pointed to a dramatic change in policy towards minority groups since the death of Salman Taseer, Governor of the Punjab, who was assassinated on January 4, last year for his outspoken criticism of oppression of minority groups.
-http://www.acnuk.org/