Tahira, Masroor and Asad
Must Stay

Asad
and Tahira Raja fled Pakistan in October 2004 because of religious
persecution. The Raja family are Ahmadis, followers of this religion
in *Pakistan are often victims of discrimination and targets of
religious intolerance instigated by organised religious extremists.
Independent human rights organisations have documented evidence
to show that Ahmadis suffer because of their religious beliefs
and that there is complicity by the Pakistan Government in the
persecution of Ahmadis.
Asad was raised in a Sunni Muslim family. However, as he got older,
he found Ahmadi Muslim faith and eventually in 2000, he converted
to Ahmadi religion. His family and friends refused to accept his
conversion from Sunni to Ahmadi faith. This resulted in Asad being
ostracised by his family and his local community. He was also subjected
to being attacked by some relations and this ultimately caused
Asad to be left homeless. The local mullahs of Khatme Nabuwwat
(KN) organised a demo against Asad, classed him as an infidel and
on 15/8/04 issued a fatwa against him - all because he believes
in Ahmadi Muslim faith. In 2003, Asad married Tahira, a fellow
Ahmadi Muslim.
In January 2004, Asad was attacked and beaten by a group of bearded
men whilst walking home from work. He had to receive hospital treatment
in Kotli. When released from hospital, he tried to report the crime
to the police but found they were not helpful in dealing with his
complaint. Thus, through fear of further attacks because of their
religion, Asad and his wife moved house once more.
In September 2004, the KN circulated a letter informing the Sunni
Muslim community that Asad had now married a fellow Ahmadi. The
letter denounced Asad as an apostate who deserved to be killed
for his change of faith. The couple constantly had to move house
to avoid being located by the mullahs who issued the fatwa against
Asad. They lived in constant fear of being subjected to further
attacks, taken to detention or being killed. Hence why the couple
had to flee Pakistan and applied for asylum in UK in October 2004.
In April 2005, Asad and Tahira learnt that UK Home Office had
refused their claim for asylum. The family say that they have never
received any formal letter advising of this decision, and their
lawyer confirmed that nothing had been communicated to his office
in reference to this asylum decision. Asad and Tahira only discovered
this negative decision when they received a letter from NASS in
April 2005 notifying the couple that they would no longer be in
receipt of any NASS support because of their negative asylum decision.
Since then, the Ahmeds have been living without NASS support.
They have no income. They are living with their baby in a cold
and unsuitable accommodation and are surviving on food parcels
and charity.
Leaving asylum seekers destitute in UK is unacceptable treatment
by UK Home Office. This traumatic situation is affecting their
mental and physical health. The family are terrified of being removed
from UK to Pakistan where they suffered so much in the past because
of their faith. Now they are in desperate hardship in UK. Their
lawyer in Glasgow has tried to apply to NASS to get their support
reinstated. Their GP has also raised concerns about their medical
health caused by living in hardship with no means to eat properly
daily.
The Ahmeds have sent Home Office further documents, which are
genuine evidence of their persecution back in Pakistan. They deserve
to be granted leave to remain, and to be allowed to live a safe
and settled life in Glasgow to raise their family without fear
of further abuses or religious persecution.
Please support Asad Ahmed Raja and his family in their fight to
have the right to stay in UK. The Home Secretary should review
the family's asylum case thoroughly and fairly. He should ensure
that the family are no more forced to live in inhumane conditions
in UK. The Ahmeds are peaceful and decent people who are just asking
for protection by being granted Leave To Remain.
How you can help
Friends and supporters have set up a writing campaign to
persuade Tony McNulty MP Minister of State for Immigration, Citizenship and
Nationality, on the strength of the Asad Familys links to the community and
the community's links to the family and the more than probable persecution
they would suffer if removed to Pakistan, that they should be allowed to remain
in the UK.
The campaign has drawn up
a Model Letter and a petition (that you can download) which you
could copy/amend, or better still, write your own version with
your own comments.
The campaign is asking everyone to make copies
of and sign the Petition and Model Letter (or to write their own),
and get as many other people as possible to do the same, and return
them to the campaign at the below address. When they have collected
enough letters and completed petition sheets, the campaign will
get them presented to the Minister for Immigration, by their local
MP.
Raja Family Must Stay Campaign
C/o Association of Nationalities Support Unit (ANSU)
96/15 Grafton Place
Glasgow
G1 2TE
Thanks in anticipation,
Geraldine Agbor
campaign secretary
ansu_uk@hotmail.com
Download model letter: AsadML.doc
Download petition: Asad PT.doc
* Background to persecution of Ahmadis in Pakistan
- While Ahmadis consider themselves Muslims, their persecution
is wholly legalized, even encouraged, by the Pakistani government.
Ahmadi mosques have been burned, their graves desecrated, and
their very existence criminalized. Since 2000, 325 Ahmadis have
been formally charged in criminal cases (including blasphemy)
for professing their religion.64 Between 1999 and 2003, the government
charged scores of Ahmadis with blasphemy; several have been convicted
and face life imprisonment or death sentences pending appeal.
The offenses charged included wearing an Islamic slogan on a
shirt, planning to build an Ahmadi mosque in Lahore, and distributing
Ahmadi literature in a public square.
-
As a result, thousands of
Ahmadis have fled Pakistan to seek asylum abroad.
Human Rights Watch June 2005
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