Christians fleeing Pakistan are stuck in Thailand
By Dan Wooding, Founder of the ASSIST News Service
BANGKOK, THAILAND (ANS – March 6, 2016)
-- Recent events in the UK –- a report to Parliament and a BBC
documentary –- have resurfaced to vividly show the plight of Pakistani
Christians fleeing to Thailand in search of asylum.
Now, according to World Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org),
a group of members of Britain’s Parliament on Feb. 24, 2016, urged
their government to adopt a harsher official assessment of Pakistan’s
treatment of Christians.
The
MPs say United Nations officials in Thailand, where thousands of
Pakistani Christians have sought asylum in recent years, are not
sufficiently concerned that Christians “face a real risk of persecution”
if returned to their home country.
World
Watch Monitor says that as a result, the MPs say, the already
overwhelmed UN bureaucracy is prolonging the asylum process and too
casually deporting Christians -- using Britain’s current, less-than
urgent assessment of Pakistan as partial justification. Meanwhile,
Christians languish for years in jobless isolation, dependent on charity
and trying to avoid arrest on charges of illegal immigration.
And
in Thailand, every asylum seeker, once their brief tourist visa
expires, is guilty of illegal immigration: the country has never signed
international agreements concerning refugees.
On
Feb. 27, 2016, the BBC released a documentary that vividly reported on
the Christians’ plight, including secretly obtained video footage of the
dank, overcrowded Thai detention centers that hold men, women and
children judged to be illegally in the country.
Who are these MPs and what does their report say?
“They
are members of the All Party Parliamentary Group for International
Freedom of Religion or Belief. AAPGs are unofficial advisory bodies to
Parliament, devoted to various topics, and open to MPs from all
political parties in both houses of Parliament,” said WWM.
This
particular report was prompted by a September 2015 visit to Thailand by
Lord David Alton, a member of the House of Lord, which is Britain’s
upper house and a long-time human-rights campaigner. He had received
information about Pakistani Christians crowded into Bangkok’s detention
centers, despite the fact that they had UN certificates indicating their
asylum case was under review. International law forbids detaining, on
immigration grounds, anyone who has a certificate.
The
bulk of the report’s 103 pages is devoted to evidence documenting how
Pakistan is a dangerous place for religious minorities, including
Christians, Ahmadis, Sikhs, Jews and others.
During
his investigation in Thailand, Alton encountered a “senior official” of
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees whose staff was both swamped with
thousands of asylum applications and without much reason to act with
urgency:
“[I]t
was made clear to Lord Alton that this individual held a negative
opinion towards the Christian asylum seekers and, by referencing the
[UK] Home Office Country Guidance on Pakistani Christians and Christian
Converts, did not believe them to have been at a ‘real risk of
persecution’ for their faith in Pakistan. Deporting them was not seen as
a process dangerous to the Christian asylum seekers.”
The
UK Home Office, responsible for Britain’s immigration system, currently
sums up the situation for Pakistani Christians this way:
“Christians in Pakistan … in general suffer discrimination but this is not sufficient to amount to a real risk of persecution.”
That
assessment is too soft, according to the report, which says:
“Christians in Pakistan face real threats of persecution in the form of
physical violence and psychological torture at the hands of State- and
non-State actors.”
The
report asks Parliament to instruct the Home Office to update its
assessment of Pakistan, which Alton said the UNHCR in Thailand studies
closely to guide its policy on Christian refugees. It also is used by
the UK immigration office to help determine asylum applications from
Pakistanis in the UK.
“The
official line of the UK Government is that there is no persecution, the
reality is the opposite of that and our report dispenses with that
illusion,” Alton said in a Feb. 23, 2016, release.
Tied
to Pakistan through colonial history, a large Pakistani diaspora, and
£1 billion (UK Pounds) in annual aid, Britain has a deep interest in
Pakistan’s internal affairs. “We should be demanding that British aid is
used to protect minorities and to staunch the flow of refugees,” Alton
said.
Why do Christians leave Pakistan?
The
Islamic Republic of Pakistan is 95 percent Muslim, and 2.3 percent
Christian. According to Open Doors, a charity that provides support to
Christians in places where they are under pressure, extremist Islamic
parties don’t enjoy wide voter support, but anti-Christian forces are
active at the grass roots. It says more than 40 jihadi groups and
radical Islamic parties align under the umbrella of the Pakistan Defense
Council.
WWM
went on to feature the story of Pakistani, Bridget John, who they said
they said seen her husband murdered and she was tortured.
“She fled Pakistan for asylum in Britain,” said the World Watch Monitor story. The UK wants to send her back.”
WWM
also said that violence is a regular feature of life in Pakistan. It
cited that 2009, Muslim rioters killed seven Christians and burned 100
homes in the north-eastern city of Gojra.
“I
saved my life by hiding in a Muslim neighbor’s house,” said Ghizala
Javed, 30, now in Thailand and seeking resettlement through the UNHCR.
2013:
Angry mobs burned the Joseph Colony Christian slum, in Lahore. Later
that year, a suicide attack on All Saints Anglican Church in Peshawar
killed more than 100 people as they left worship services.
2015: Two suicide bombers killed 17 people at two neighboring churches in Lahore.
It’s
not only Christians. Jews have essentially disappeared since the
country’s inception in 1947 because of its Islamization. Some Hindus
leaving for India said “their shops were looted, their houses were
raided and their women were forcefully converted,” reported The Tribune.
Violence
against Christians frequently is triggered by accusations, almost
always bogus, that someone has desecrated a Quran or has insulted the
Prophet Muhammed. Blasphemy of Islam carries a minimum sentence of life
in prison, with the death penalty an option. Pakistan’s anti-blasphemy
laws are widely popular among politically significant blocs of voters,
even as they are criticized in world capitals as tools of Muslim
intimidation.
“We
miss Pakistan but we were forced to leave the country because every
person is ready to accuse us of blasphemy,” said Javed, who has been
granted refugee status. “There is no respect for Christians and we are
without self-esteem. Because of discrimination at every level, we cannot
progress in Pakistan.”
Add to that mix the fact that most Pakistani Christians work at the menial end of the economy. Child labor is pervasive.
“The
result is, said WWM, that in 2011, only four countries produced more
refugees seeking asylum in industrialized countries than Pakistan.
But
it is not, for the most part, the poorest and most vulnerable
Christians who are able to get out. Wilson Chowdhry of the British
Pakistani Christian Association said most of those seeking asylum from
Pakistan are professionals, who have faced blasphemy accusations and
other threats to their lives. Among them are three former
parliamentarians who sought asylum in the West, reportedly because they
were threatened with violence.
Why are they going to Thailand?
First,
there are regular, if lengthy, flights to Bangkok. Thailand is a
popular tourist destination, and a 60-day tourist visa is easy to get.
Second, Pakistan’s immediate neighbors – Afghanistan, China, India, Iran
– are hardly any more accommodating to Christians.
How
many have come? Estimates vary. In March 2015, the Jubilee Campaign,
co-founded by Lord Alton, reported that around 4,000 Pakistani
Christians were seeking asylum in Thailand. A month later, the Farrukh
Saif Foundation put the number at about 7,000.
The
UNHCR says that as of December, there were 11,500 Pakistanis seeking
asylum in Thailand, a 51 percent increase from the previous year. The
report issued last week in Britain’s Parliament classifies them all as
Christian.
“They
will have sold their possessions and homes and often had barely enough
to pay for passage out to Thailand,” Chowdhry said. “In Thailand,
though, they are still in a terrible state, forced to work in low-level
jobs illegally.”
The
difficulties are real, but at least one Christian asylum-seeker, Khalid
Naaz, said Thailand is largely free of the constant fear of a blasphemy
accusation in their home country.
Several
asylum seekers told World Watch Monitor they dropped off their asylum
applications at the UNHCR office in Bangkok in their first month. It
normally takes six months to obtain asylum-seeker status. After a formal
interview that takes place about a year later, they may be given
refugee status.
Then
begins a wait for resettlement in another country that can take years.
Those years are dominated by caution, isolation, and sporadic,
underground work to avoid arrest. Technically, they are breaking the law
the moment their tourist visa expires. Entire families live in a single
room in buildings of flats, often supported by local churches. For
families with children, there is no school.
“There
are 30 Pakistani families living in our building. I am really afraid
and don't know when we are going to be next,” Victoria Riaz said. “I
have to work all day long because each month I have to pay the rent.
Recently, I had an offer to teach Urdu in a Thai school but I couldn't
join because I don't have a valid visa.”
Almost
every family relies on supplementary financial support from relatives
or a church. Sometimes they receive food, usually rice, from churches
and charities. Buying flour – wheat is a staple in Pakistan – is
prohibitively expensive. Those who can’t afford to buy food go to
gurdwaras, Sikh temples where food is offered for free.
In
February, World Watch Monitor met a young Pakistani mother (whose
husband was in detention), her small child and the teenage daughter of
another Pakistani family living at an international church in central
Bangkok. The expatriate pastor was clearly supporting and helping them
as resources allowed, but said it was difficult as the numbers were so
high.
Many
of those who must spend the bulk of their time in a single room, which
usually does not include a bed, suffer from backache, knee pain and
other muscular problems. The only activity they have at home is talking
with relatives on Skype.
“Direct
phone calls are very expensive from Thailand to Pakistan, so Skype is
the cheapest way and also helps us kill time,” a refugee, Francis
Sodagar, said.
When
in public, Pakistani Christians avoid traditional Pakistani dress
because they are immediately recognized and sometimes regarded as
potential terrorists.
“Even
taxi drivers call us ‘bomb’ and ‘Bin Laden’,” Mubarak Masih, a pastor
seeking asylum, told World Watch Monitor. “Several times our people
refrain to tell their country of origin because then Thai people treat
us as terrorists.”
To
avoid arrest, they pretend to be tourists and leave the children at
home. “When they speak Urdu, their chances of arrest are higher;
otherwise they are perceived as Indians,” Sodagar said. “The police
especially take notice of Muslims and run a thorough check on them, so
our ‘look’ could play an important role in arrest.”
UN certificates or no, Thai authorities began to crack down on asylum seekers a year ago.
“The
police raided our building and arrested members of one family,” Riaz
recalled about a day in May 2015. She, her husband and three children
waited out the raid inside their locked room.
Hundreds
of Christians have been caught up in the sweeps. Four raids just before
Christmas rounded up 63 Christians, most of them women and children,
including 25 on Christmas Eve.
The
arrested are taken to detention centers or jails. “Conditions in both
are horrific,” Chowdhry said, “with massive overstaying, pitifully poor
nutrition and the resultant disease epidemics.”
Watch the BBC documentary. Click here to view entire documentary (UK only). http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b072sbqr?utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_content=Christians+fleeing+Pakistan+are+stuck+in+Thailand&utm_campaign=Christians+fleeing+Pakistan+are+stuck+in+Thailand.
The
secret video captured by the BBC and released this week shows hundreds
of people jammed into overcrowded pens. One Pakistani who had been
arrested, Thomas Masih Burrat, told World Watch Monitor that more than
200 Christians were placed in one room. Often, mothers opt to keep their
children with them while in custody. The men are separated. Several
have died while being held.
Some asylum-seekers, all men, have even been sent to Thai prisons, into cells with convicted criminals.
The
Jubilee Campaign said in February that the Thai government had agreed
to begin releasing detainees with health problems. According to the
organization, the decision was prompted by the 10 Jan. death of Pervaiz
Ghouri Masih, 53, whose ill health – he was afflicted with a tumor and
heart condition – was exacerbated by the crowded, dirty conditions and
meagre nutrition.
Christians
arriving in Thailand from Pakistan “no longer fear for their lives, but
face other fears like arrest, hunger and the possibility that they will
never be able to live freely,” Pakistan’s Express Tribune reported.
Photo
caption: 1) A Thai immigration police officer directs Pakistani
refugees released on bail to a waiting bus after their detention at the
Immigration detention center in Bangkok in June 2011. (AFP PHOTO/
Nicolas ASFOURI / Getty Images) 2) Pakistani girls behind bars in
Thailand. 3) Lord Alton (third from left) and friends outside the
Immigration Detention Centre, Bangkok. 4) Muslim proudly celebrates
violence against Christians in Gojra). 5) Norma and Dan Wooding on a
reporting assignment for ANS (Photo: Bryan Seltzer).
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma,
to whom he has been married for more than 52 years. They have two sons,
Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is
the founder and international director of ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints
in Strategic Times) and the ASSIST News Service (ANS), and is also the
author of some 45 books, the latest of which is Mary, My Story from
Bethlehem to Calvary (http://marythebook.com).
He has been a full-time journalist now since 1968 when he began his
career in London, and later worked as a senior reporter for two of the
UK’s largest-circulation newspapers, the Sunday People and the Sunday Mirror.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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