​UK Home Office to review guidance after BPCA report.

Lord Alton meets with Wilson Chowdhry and a delegation of Pak-Christians in Thailand

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Last evening (Monday 5th October) the UK Home Office agreed to at least review its guidance around the situation facing Pakistani Christians
and to consider the latest report from the British Pakistani Christian Association (BPCA) entitled Education, Human Rights Violations and the Scandal involving UNHCR and Asylum Seekers in Thailand.
In a formal response to a question in the House of Lords tabled 19 September 2015 by Lord Alton, Lord Bates, responded on behalf of the Home Office.
(view question and answer at bottom of page) 

 

Lord Alton had asked what assessment the government had made of the findings of the BPCA report and review the risk of persecution of Christians in
Pakistan and update their guidance document Pakistan : Christians and Christian converts. Lord Bates responded that the Home Office would
be considering the report “alongside a range of other material to make a full assessment of the situation of Christians in Pakistan, and will revise
its country information and guidance if necessary” whilst noting issues in Thailand were primarily the responsibility of the Thai government.  

Wilson Chowdhry, chairman of the BPCA, a campaigning and human rights NGO founded in 2009 which is now a charity, said:

“We have long been saying that the Home Office position does not reflect the facts on the ground. We note that Foreign Office material on Pakistan includes
Christians amongst those who are persecuted, which matches independent annual reports and rankings which most recently say that Pakistan is 8th worst in the world for persecution of Christians, yet the Home Office has maintained that Christians generally are merely severely discriminated against,
but not persecuted. We hope and pray that there will be a radical revision in guidance, particularly as the situation grows worse, with the Pakistani
armed forces now warning that ISIS is highly likely to launch a wave of attacks on Christians and churches across Pakistan. I want to point out that
also the USA’s Congressional body dealing with International Religious Freedom has asked for Pakistan to be made a country of particular concern for
some time in regard to issues such as this. We would ask that people write to their MPs or the Home Office in support of a review that reflects reality,
quoting question HL2312″.

 

Rev Tim Eady of Christchurch Bangkok, prays for Lord Alton, The BPCA and suffering Pak-Christians  

Nathanael Lewis, a researcher for the BPCA further commented:

“When dealing with asylum rejections done under past and current Home Office guidance, we have consistently found that there is a gross overestimation
of the ability and willingness of police or the authorities to protect Christians or treat them fairly, the so called ‘sufficiency of protection’ question,
as well as of the room for successful internal relocation, and a gross underestimation of the severity of the situation on the ground. When we are
talking about discrimination in Pakistan, it is not a few snide comments, it is very severe discrimination indeed, something equivalent to the treatment
of African-Americans in USA post-slavery prior to the ’60s. There are even areas where there are separate drinking fountains, one for Muslims only,
the other for non-Muslims. Asia Bibi, the mother of five on death row, is there after a row started precisely because she drank from the water she
was carrying to her Muslim co-workers. The Home Office guidance is important because a number of other countries, and even the UN, tend to look to
the UK guidance to formulate their own position, and is causing huge suffering in places like Thailand because Pakistani Christians are deemed not
a priority, and also because the guidance seems to tie in with Pakistani government claims that Christians will be safe and can be deported back to
the country. This needs to change extremely urgently.”

 

Please click here to sign our petition to raise awareness for the persecuted Pakistani Christians in Thailand. Buy our book on the plight of Pak-Christians in Thailand: click here

Please Pray:
Pakistani Christians are given the status and profile by the UK Home Office that they need in order to escape persecution and be safe.
Government decision makers will be moved to decide in favour of granting asylum to Pak-Christians who have already applied, and none will be deported.
Muslim interpretors will not be used and no false information or  intimidation will occur due to this. 

Please consider giving to our work for the innocent. Donations can be sent using these bank details:

Payee: BPCA
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Alternatively you can use the PayPal facility on the top right hand corner of our blog, our PayPal email address is info@britishpakistanichristians.org.Cheques should be made payable to the BPCA to our address: 57 Green Lane, Ilford, Essex, IG1 1XG. BRITISH PAKISTANI CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION is a trading name for BRITISH PAKISTANI CHRISTIANS LTD which is a charity entered onto the Register of Charities with the Registered Charity Number 1163363


Thank you.

With your support we hope to change the lives of millions of Christians in Pakistan.

Lord Alton’s Question and response from Lord Bates:

Lord Bates, the Home Office, has provided the following answer to your written parliamentary question (HL2312):

Question:

To ask Her Majesty’s Government what assessment they have made of the findings of the report commissioned by the British Pakistan Christian Association,
entitled Education, Human Rights Violations in Pakistan and the Scandal Involving UNHRC and Asylum Seekers in Thailand; and whether, in the
light of this report, they plan to review the risk of the persecution of Christians in Pakistan and update their guidance document Pakistan: Christians and Christian Converts.
(HL2312)

Tabled on: 17 September 2015


Answer:

Lord Bates:

The Home Office will be considering the report commissioned by the British Pakistani Christian Association alongside a range of other material to make
a full assessment of the situation of Christians in Pakistan, and will revise its country information and guidance if necessary.

The Home Office considers that the treatment of asylum seekers in Thailand is primarily a matter for the Thai authorities.

Date and time of answer: 05 Oct 2015 at 17:26.