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Pakistan: Church protests discriminatory official job advertisement

Pakistani Church authorities express their objection over a job advert in local dailies offering cleaning jobs exclusively to non-Muslims. Pakistan’s Christian minorities make up 80 percent of the country’s sanitation workforce, according to a study by Open Doors USA. This is despite the fact that they make up 1.6 percent of Pakistan’s total population.

 

Church authorities have voiced their disapproval over the publication of a job advertisement considered to be discriminatory towards minorities, Vatican News reports.

The state-run Municipal Corporation (West) Karachi, on 1 June, announced 28 job vacancies of different categories in local newspapers. However, it reserved sanitary jobs exclusively for non-Muslims.

Reacting to this, the vicar general of Karachi Archdiocese and director of its National Commission for Justice and Peace, Father Saleh Diego met with the government’s representative on minority affairs, Naveed Anthony, to express objections and request the lawmaker to look into the matter.

“This is not the first time that government advertisements have hurt the sentiments of religious minorities. It is totally unacceptable,” Father Diego stated.

“We have repeatedly appealed to officials to put an end to the culture of placing advertisements that further stigmatize marginalized minorities. ”

Pakistan’s Christian minorities make up 80 percent of the country’s sanitation workforce, according to a study by Open Doors USA. This is despite the fact that they make up 1.6 percent of Pakistan’s total population.

For example, in 2015, Lahore Waste Management Company alone employed 7,894 sewer sweepers, the majority of them Christians. The same study also cites the Capital Development Authority employing 1,500 sweepers for Islamabad, all of them Christians.

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