Home » News » Pakistan: Christians denied COVID-19 aid

Pakistan: Christians denied COVID-19 aid

NGOs and Muslim leaders in Pakistan stand accused of refusing to give COVID-19 emergency aid to Christians and other religious minorities – even though they are among those worst affected by the pandemic.

Cecil Shane Chaudhry, Executive Director of the National Commission for Justice and Peace, a Catholic-run human rights organisation, described reports of religious organisations and mosques making announcements telling Christians not to come forward for food and other emergency handouts. Speaking to the British branch of the Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), Mr Chaudhry said Christians and other religious minorities were particularly in need of help as many are in the lowest paid jobs, dependent on daily wages, and on the breadline, with work drying up because of the lockdown. And, stressing how minority women were especially at risk, he called on the Pakistan government to provide masks, gloves and other COVID-19 protective equipment for sanitary workers and domestic workers – many of whom are Christians.

Pakistan: Christians denied COVID-19 aid.
Pakistan: Christians denied COVID-19 aid.

With Pakistan’s government now easing the lockdown, Mr Chaudhry said he feared a spike in COVID-19 cases especially among Christians and other minorities whose jobs, he said, make them particularly at risk of infection. Mr Chaudhry gave reports of how Christians in a village near Lahore on Raiwind Road had been denied food aid and how, in a separate incident, about 100 Christian families were excluded from food distribution in Sandha Kalan village, in the Punjab’s Kasur district. He said there were reports of COVID-19 emergency aid staff on the ground refusing to give help to non-Muslims as the donations had come as Zakat charitable offerings, in accordance with Islamic Shari‘a law.

Mr Chaudhry said: “COVID-19 knows no boundaries – everyone is at risk, irrespective of their religion so how can it be fair to deny food and other emergency help to Christians and other minorities, especially when they are among those suffering the most at this time?” The NCJP chief quoted an imam from a mosque in Lahore’s Model Town who, he said, had announced in a recent sermon: “There will be a ration distribution tomorrow morning for needy people but only for Muslims.”

Pakistan has 32,819 confirmed cases of Coronavirus, according to latest reports, with 733 deaths, although Mr Chaudhry stressed many cases were going unreported. The NCJP chief called on the government to consult with minority groups about COVID-19 response initiatives and to make better use of census data to target aid for the most vulnerable. He said: “Although plans are being worked on, for now we do not know of [any initiatives to include] religious minority members to ensure their needs are not ignored.” Aid to the Church in Need has in place a €5m COVID-19 emergency aid programme to support the work of the local Churches worldwide.

 

Don't miss the latest updates!

Nigerian Bishops: “Lasting peace cannot be achieved through silence or delay”

Catholic Bishops of Nigeria warn of escalating violence and call…

New mass abduction of schoolgirls in northern Nigeria

The attack represents “a major blow to the education of…

Four Christians killed, villages razed in fresh attack in Mozambique

An estimated 128,000 people have had to flee the affected…

Nigeria: Priest abducted in the Archdiocese of Kaduna

The west African nation has been classified as suffering from…

Red Week 2025: A global cry for religious freedom

Over half a million people are expected to take part…

ACN expresses solidarity with Cuba after the devastating passage of the hurricane

The organisation Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) expresses…

Burkina Faso: Two dioceses hit by new wave of attacks

The international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need…

Cardinal Kurt Koch appointed president of ACN – “We are grateful to Pope Leo,” says executive president Regina Lynch

Cardinal Koch has been a friend of ACN for many years and brings with him a wealth of experience in the field of ecumenical and inter-religious dialogue. The pontifical foundation...

Nigerian Bishops: “Lasting peace cannot be achieved through silence or delay”

Catholic Bishops of Nigeria warn of escalating violence and call for urgent action to protect life and religious freedom Aid to the Church in Need (ACN) echoes the urgent appeal...

ACN helps keep the doors of Christian education in the Holy Land open

With unemployment disproportionately affecting the Christian community, and as a gesture during the Jubilee of Hope, the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem took the decision to cancel student debt in all...