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Archbishop of Canterbury joins calls for protection of Pakistan’s Christians


Archbishop Welby

Archbishop Welby

The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, who is currently visiting Anglican leaders in Pakistan, has said the Christians of Pakistan are a people under siege and joined calls for their churches to be protected and for them to be able to worship in safety.

“Freedom of worship is a universal human right around the world, and all countries need to pay attention to that,” he said.

Meanwhile, condemning the "revolting lynching" of a pregnant Pakistani woman who was stoned to death by her family in front of hundreds of people outside the Lahore high court, the Archbishop told the Times: “I was utterly horrified and every Pakistani I have spoken to is also horrified. It (the stoning) was in no sense a punishment, but but a revolting lynching.”

Archbishop Justin was speaking at the end of a two-day visit to Pakistan’s Anglicans leaders in the eastern city of Lahore, during which he heard of the persecution and daily threats Christians face from Islamist militants.

Pakistan is home to 3.6 million Christians – about two percent of the population – who have been targeted by the misuse of draconian blasphemy laws.

Blasphemy carries the death penalty in Pakistan and cases against both religious minorities and Muslims are rising.

The Archbishop added his voice to the plea for an immediate change in laws that have also been misused to target Muslims by those with a vendetta against their neighbours.

“I pray for their blessing and for the government to be favourable to seeing that this is not a group that are seeking undue advantage but are only seeking to do good,” he said during a press conference.

Archbishop Justin, accompanied by his wife Caroline, was visiting Pakistan at the invitation of its Anglican primate, the Most Revd Samuel Robert Azariah, Bishop of Raiwind and Moderator of the Church of Pakistan.

During the visit Archbishop Justin met with Christian and Muslim leaders, attended a special service at Lahore’s Cathedral of the Resurrection, and met with high school students.

The visit is the first leg of a week-long visit by Archbishop Justin to fellow Anglican primates in the region. On Thursday the Archbishop arrived in Bangladesh, after which he will travel to India.

Archbishop Justin’s visit to the region forms part of his plan to visit all of his fellow archbishops (also known as 'primates') during his first 18 months in office. His desire is to express solidarity, build personal and professional bonds, understand the primates’ work in their local contexts, and lay foundations for good collaboration over the coming years.

Next month, the Archbishop will visit Rome from 14 to 16 June as part of a human trafficking and modern slavery initiative he launched with Pope Francis last year. The pair, who met in 2013 in a private meeting, will meet on the final day of the archbishop's trip.

In Rome Archbishop Welby will visit the Anglican Centre to hear about a new international Anglican Roman Catholic Commission on Unity and Mission website. The Archbishop will also see a church-based refugee project, visit the Sant'Egidio community mission and hear about poverty projects.

Lambeth Palace said he would meet members of the international ecumenical Catholic foundation Chemin Neuf. Four members of the foundation took up residence at Lambeth Palace earlier this year.

Source: Archbishop of Canterbury/Lambeth Palace

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