First Quote Added
4ě 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"Confronted with criticism by the United Nations and other international bodies, Pakistan vowed to prevent kidnapping for the purpose of converting members of religious minorities to Islam and to regard conversions of minors forcibly separated from their parents as legally invalid. The Shahdadpur verdict goes in a different direction."
"âŚblasphemy allegations are increasingly employed as avenues for extortion. Organized entities often manufacture charges to extract financial gain or seize property, leaving both Muslim and non-Muslim victims with limited avenues for recourse, as defending against such allegations frequently invites further persecution."
"There is a new business in Pakistan, and it plays with the life and death of innocent people. It goes like this: hackers post online contents blaspheming Islam in the name of persons who do not even know what is going on. Then they report their victims to the police, who arrest them based on the fabricated blasphemy charges. At this stage, the hackers offer to retract the allegations and tell the police they were based on a âmistakeâ if the victim pays a significant sum of money. If [the] victims do not pay, [then the] cases go on and they face blasphemy charges which may lead to the death penalty under Pakistani law."
"The Human Rights Commission of Pakistanâs (HRCP) report, âCaught in the Crossfire: Civilians, Security and the Crisis of Justice in Khyber Pakhtunkhwaâs Merged Districtsâ (Lahore: HRCP, 2025), reads like a tragic script for a play the state insists on performing over and over again. The title, âCaught in the Crossfire,â is apt: civilians are literally and figuratively trapped between militants who kill in the name of religion and a government that kills in the name of security. The statistics alone are chilling. In July 2025, 82 militant attacks nationwideâtwo-thirds of them in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. By September, 45 attacks in the province killed 54 people, while âsecurity forces reportedly carried out 22 operations⌠killing 88 militantsâ but also 24 civilians. The arithmetic of counterterrorism in Pakistan has always been brutal: militants dead, civilians dead, justice dead."