Dokument #1027348
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
The Ahmadyyia religious group was founded
in 1889 by Prophet Mirza Ghulam Ahmed and now has more than ten
million followers throughout the world, with four million in
Pakistan [Petrén G., H. Cull, J. McBride and D. Ravindran,
Pakistan: Human Rights After Martial Law, (Geneva: Lawyers
Committee for Human Rights, 1986), p. 103; Degenhardt H.W.
Revolutionary and Dissident Movements, (London: Longman,
1988), p. 266.]. The Ahmadis do not consider Mohammed as the last
of the prophets, constituting a major contradiction with one of the
fundamental principles of Muslim Orthodoxy [ The New
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Macropaedia, vol.25, (Chicago et al:
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1989), p. 383-384.].
The "Lahori Group" is the result of further
schism by a group of dissidents who founded their own sect after
the death of Mirza Ghulam Ahmed in 1908 [ Petrén et al.,
ibid, p. 105.]. The Lahori Group does not accept Ahmed as their
prophet, but believe in the Jehad (Holy War) and in the death of
Christ [Ibid.]. The Lahori Group is considered more modern and
liberal than the Ahmadyyia sect, which closely follows the 19th
century teachings of Mirza Ghulam Ahmed [ Gualtieri A.
Conscience and Coercion: Ahmadi Muslims and Orthodoxy in
Pakistan, (Montréal: Guernica, 1989), p. 104.].
The Ahmadiyya headquarters is located in
the city of Rabwah, although the government does not allow
believers to held their annual meetings there, forcing the Ahmadis
to meet outside Pakistan [ Petrén et al., ibid, p. 115.].
Most families in Rabwah are Ahmadi and the city contains at least
two Ahmadi mosques and one Orthodox mosque [ Telephone conversation
with a scholar expert on the Ahmadis, Department of religious
sciences, Carleton University, Ottawa, 27 November 1989.].
At the end of May 1974, a group of students
belonging to the Jamaat-e-Islami (a fundamentalist movement hostile
to the Ahmadis) provoked riots at the Rabwah train stations and in
other cities of Pakistan; the 1974 anti-Ahmadi riots resulted in
the death of 27 Ahmadis and the destruction of Ahmadi mosques,
stores and houses [ Ahmadiyya Muslim Association, The Plight of
Ahmadi Muslims, (Toronto: AMA, 1987), p. 7; "Shops Set on Fire
in Pakistan", The Daily Telegraph (London U.K.), 31 May
1974; "Sectarian Violence Flares in Pakistan", The Times
(London U.K.), 31 May 1974. These two articles are reprinted in:
Ahmadiyya Muslim Association, Persecution of Ahmadi Muslims and
their Response, (Surrey, U.K.: AMA), p. 8; Ashworth G. World
Minorities, vol.I, (Sunbury (UK): Quartermaine, 1979), p.
8.].
Following the May 1984 violence, the
government of Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, father of the
current Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto, declared the Ahmadis to be
a "Non-Muslim minority" [ Petrén et al., ibid, p. 104.].
Special restrictive provisions for the Ahmadis were further enacted
by General Zia in 1984, when Ordinance XX decreed the Quadiani
Group (named after Mirza Ghulam Ahmed's birth place), the Lahori
Group and the Ahmadis to conduct "anti-islamic" activities, (that
is, to declare themselves Muslims, to refer orally or in a written
manner to the Prophet Mohammed or to his wife, to enter a mosque,
etc.) [ Ministry of Law and Parliamentary Affairs, "Ordinance No.
XX of 1984", The Gazette of Pakistan, (Islamabad: Government
of Pakistan, 26 April 1984), p. 8.]. The sanctions imposed on
Ahmadis range from several years' imprisonment to a range of fines
[ Ibid.].
Since 1984, the Ahmadis have been victims
of diverse forms of harassment (legalized by Ordinance XX),
including the right to proclaim themselves Muslim (they do not
accept their classification as "Non-Muslims" and consider
themselves only as members of a Muslim sect) and to practice
Islamic rituals [Andreassen B.A. et A. Eide, eds. Human Rights
in Developing Countries 1987/1988, (Copenhagen: Akademisk
Forlag, 1988), p. 240.]. The Ahmadis are obliged to declare
themselves non-Muslims in order to exert their right to vote and to
bury their dead in segregated cemeteries, which have been
desecrated in the past [Petrén G. et al., ibid.]. Fifteen
Ahmadis were condemned to five years in prison in Mardan in 1986
because they had written sacred words on their business receipts [
Ibid.]. In March 1986, 26 Ahmadis where arrested for wearing a
religious insignia called "kalima" [ Ibid.]. Some Ahmadis of
Karachi were assassinated in 1986 [ Ahmadiyya Muslim Association,
ibid, p.13.]. Students registering for university were refused
access to post-secondary studies when they indicated that their
religion was "Islam (Ahmadi)" instead of "Non-Muslim" [
Petrén et al., ibid, p. 105.]. The use of the Muslim
greeting "Assalam-o-Alaikum" is deemed to be blasphemous if said by
so-called "Non-Muslims", and has led to the arrest of numerous
Ahmadis [ Petrén et al., ibid, p. 107.]. Ahmadis are in
general excluded from government positions [ Degenhardt,
ibid.].
Under the administration of Prime Minister
Benazir Bhutto, the legal and political conditions of Ahmadis have
further deteriorated [ Hyman A. "No Great Change in Human Rights",
Index on Censorship, 10/89, p. 24-26.]. Recent incidents in
Nankana Sahib and Chak Sikandar in April and June 1989, demonstrate
the fact that social relations between Orthodox Muslims in
Pakistan, influenced by increasing influence of fundamentalism in
that country, have worsened since the Salman Rushdie affair in
early 1989, and the Ahmadis, to be deemed increasingly heretical [
Petrén et al., ibid, p. 103.]. On 12 April 1989, Nankana
Saheb Ahmadi mosque and forty Ahmadi houses were burned to the
ground by armed individuals [Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam (Ontario),
New Spate of Violence in Pakistan, (Toronto: AMI, 1989), p.
2. See also, for corroboration, a fax sent by the Canadian Embassy
in Islamabad through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Canada to
the IRBDC in Ottawa, dated 10 August 1989.]. The Pakistan
Times of Lahore, although considered to be "pro-government",
also reported the Nankana Sahib incident [ Reprinted in:
International Ahmadiyya Movement in Islam, The Situation of
Ahmadi Muslims: After the Dawn of Democracy in Pakistan,
(London: IAMI, 1989), p. 21; The Pakistan Times is qualified
"pro-gouvernemental" in: Observatoire de l'information,
L'information dans le monde, (Paris: Seuil, 1989), p. 425.].
On 16 June 1989, at least three Ahmadis were killed and numerous
houses burned in Chak Sikandar [International Ahmadiyya Movement in
Islam, ibid, p. 9-10.]. An article from New Life and a
publication of the "Pakistan Human Rights Commission" are attached
for more details regarding the Nankana Sahib and Chak Sikandar
incidents [ "New Wave of Violence Greets Ahmadiyyas", New
Life, 21 April 1989. This article is reprinted in: Ahmadiyya
Muslim Association, 1989, ibid, p. 86; Human Rights Commission of
Pakistan, 1989, Riot and Arson: Nankana Sahib, 12 April
1989, Lahore: HRCP.].