Christian Slum Dwellers Fight Eviction in Islamabad, Pakistan
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com )
LAHORE, PAKISTAN (ANS-Dec 10, 2015) -- Yaqub Masih is one of thousands of impoverished Christians facing demolition of his makeshift home in Islamabad.
According
to a story by Morning Star News, that’s after a government agency last
week stated that informal slum settlements of Christian migrants
threatened the city’s Muslim-majority demographic.
“It is one thing being poor,
but things are far worse if you are poor and Christian,” said the
middle-aged man who ekes out a living as a mason. “Has the government
even considered where I would take my family if they put us out on the
street?”
In a statement that rights
groups called bigoted, Pakistan’s Capital Development Authority (CDA)
asserted on Dec. 4 to the Supreme Court of Pakistan that “it is
necessary to identify the fact that most katchi abadis (slum
settlements) are under the occupation of the Christian community” from
other parts of Pakistan, and “this pace of occupation of land may affect
(the) Muslim majority of the capital.”
The CDA statement came in
response to an Aug. 2 petition to the Supreme Court by the
Islamabad-Rawalpindi Chapter of the Awami Workers’ Party (AWP) seeking a
declaration that the government must provide shelter and other
amenities to citizens under the constitution.
The CDA on July 30 began
evicting some of the more than 16,000 people in the I-11 slum settlement
in Islamabad, Pakistan, bulldozing ramshackle homes and shops, before
the Supreme Court issued a stay order stopping the operation in August.
Not all of Islamabad’s slum
dwellers are Christian, and initially the CDA had generated propaganda
that the settlements housed Islamic terrorists as justification for the
evictions, as many of the settlers in I-11 were from the Khyber
Pakhtunkwa Province. That’s a heavily radicalized area formerly known
as North-West Frontier Province along the Afghanistan border.
Islamabad’s settlements overall, however, are largely inhabited by
Christians, estimated at nearly 80,000.
Morning Star News said Masih
and his family live in Islamabad’s Maskeen Colony, one of about 30
makeshift settlements to which the CDA has sent eviction notices.
“Our elders have been
residing on this land since the inception of Islamabad in 1960,” he
said. “Most of us migrated to this city from other parts of Punjab,
mainly Sialkot, Narowal and Faisalabad in search for a better life. But
things have never been easy for us.”
Many poor Christians in the
settlements find it difficult to find jobs in the city for the sole
reason that they are Christian. Masih’s cousin, Aamir, said Christian
slum dwellers are often forced to take up menial jobs.
“Life is much better for our
Muslim neighbors in Islamabad, who at least manage to get better- paid
jobs, whereas we Christians have no other option but to earn a
livelihood from cleaning jobs,” he said.
“Now they want us to just
pack up and leave our homes just because they think that we will
outnumber the Muslims. This is a ridiculous notion that amplifies the
prejudice we have been suffering all these years.”
Arif Bhatti, another
Christian slum dweller, said he was worried sick about how he will
provide for his eight-member family should the CDA bulldoze their rusty,
one-bedroom home.
“There are no equal rights in
Pakistan, not for Christians,” Morning Star News reported he said. “We
have been living in our colony for the last 15 years, and now they are
threatening to send us off in trucks ‘to wherever we have come from.’
But this is our home now, and we don’t have any other place to go.”
Pakistan Interfaith League
Chairman Sajid Ishaq told Morning Star News that it was lamentable that
the government was displaying such religious bigotry toward one of the
most marginalized communities in the country.
Ishaq said each passing day
is grimmer for the nearly 80,000 Christians who have settled in the
Islamabad slums over the years in search of better livelihood.
“These poor Christians find
themselves much worse off in Islamabad, as they are compelled to take up
low-paid, marginalized jobs like sweeping roads and domestic work,” he
said. “Article 38 of the Constitution of Pakistan states that promotion
of the social and economic well-being of the people of Pakistan,
irrespective of sex, caste, creed or race, is one of the basic tasks for
the government. This does not seem to be the case for poor Christians
who have no one to turn to for justice.”
No one aspires to live in a slum, he said.
“We acknowledge that
provision of shelter and the opportunity to earn a decent wage are
dependent upon the availability of resources, but the government cannot
take away what little means these poor have to survive,” Ishaq said.
He stressed that the Supreme
Court must not allow the CDA to go ahead with a religiously-biased plan
to evict poor Christians from their homes until the Authority arranges
alternative, permanent housing for them.
Legally, resettlement has to improve on their original location, Ishaq said.
“Only in exceptional
circumstances can a removal take place, and that too after a
resettlement plan has been drafted and approved through consultation
with the residents,” the rights activist told Morning Star News.
AWP Islamabad-Rawalpindi
Secretary Ammar Rashid said CDA’s claim that the migration of poor
Christians will make Muslims a minority in the federal capital
“manifested the mindset and language of the people running Islamabad’s
affairs.”
“The CDA’s reply is proof of
the deeply prejudicial mindset that prevails in the CDA with regard to
working classes and minorities, whom they regard with utter contempt,”
Morning Star News reported Rashid said. “This sort of anti-people,
anti-minority authoritarian attitude has no place in the 21st century
and needs to be relegated to the dustbin of dictatorial history that it
emerged from.
Islamabad as the national capital belongs to all of Pakistan’s citizens, not bureaucrats of the CDA, he said.
“It is not katchi abadi residents, but the elitist policies of the
CDA that have prevented Islamabad from developing into a thriving and
inclusive city like most other capitals in the world,” Rashid said.
Advocate Abid Hassan Minto,
who is arguing the case in the Supreme Court on behalf of the AWP and
slum dwellers of various areas, said the government has turned a blind
eye to the residents’ increasing need for food, shelter and security,
especially in Islamabad.
“In the absence of any
state-provided mechanism, the residents of the katchi abadis have no
option but to occupy the temporary housing schemes that developed in the
Islamabad Capital Territory,” he said. “By evicting these residents who
have resided in Pakistan their entire life, the state is effectively
aiming to penalize people for being homeless.”
He added that the evictions were not only a violation of fundamental rights but a crime on part of the government.
“By first creating
homelessness and then penalizing it, the state is targeting its most
vulnerable population,” Morning Star News reported Minto said. “Once the
homes of slum dwellers are demolished and no adequate alternative
housing is provided, where will the state expect them to sleep?”
CDA spokesman Ramzan Sajid refused to comment on the Authority’s
reply to the court, saying he could not discuss a matter still under
judicial consideration, and that the CDA had already stated its response
to the slum dwellers’ petition.
Morning Star News also tried to reach Tariq Fazal Chaudhry, the
Minister In-Charge of Capital Administration, who was unavailable for
comment.
Demand for Solution
On Oct. 28, a three-judge
bench of the Supreme Court headed by Justice Ejaz Afzal Khan ordered the
federation and provinces to submit a concrete plan for providing
shelter for homeless people. The judges observed that tangible plans
were overdue.
“We therefore direct the
federation as well as provinces and CDA to give their feedback as to how
this serious problem – which, with every passing day, is assuming an
alarming proportion – can be solved within a shortest possible span of
time,” the bench stated.
The court’s order stated that
plans that government officials have proposed look captivating on paper
but on close examination do not appear to be concrete and feasible. The
court emphasized that providing shelter is a fundamental issue that
authorities have so far ignored and overlooked, resulting in people
making homes wherever they find space.
“Those in charge come out of
their slumber one morning and remove these slums with all the brute
force at their command,” Morning Star News reported the order said.
“They don’t pause even for a while to ponder over the problem. They
pause and ponder over when the incubation period is over. The steps
taken to remedy the problem thus further aggravate the situation.”
The court then directed the federation, provinces and CDA to find practical plans in line with the constitution.
For more information visit htttp://morningstarnews.org/
Photo captions: 1) Awami
Workers’ Party members and slum dwellers protest eviction in Islamabad
on Dec. 8. (AWP). 2) Jeremy and Elma Reynalds.
About the writer: Jeremy
Reynalds is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, a
freelance writer and also the founder and CEO of Joy Junction, New
Mexico's largest emergency homeless shelter, www.joyjunction.org.
He has a master's degree in communication from the University of New
Mexico, and a Ph.D. in intercultural education from Biola University in
Los Angeles. His newest book is "From Destitute to Ph.D." Additional
details on "From Destitute to Ph.D." are available at www.myhomelessjourney.com. Reynalds lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico with his wife, Elma. For more information contact: Jeremy Reynalds at jeremyreynalds@gmail.com .
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