Prime Minister’s Special Representative for Interfaith Harmony and Middle East Hafiz Tahir Mahmood Ashrafi Wednesday said after the successful visit of Canterbury’s Archbishop Justin Welby, it was decided that Pope Francis would be extended an invitation to visit Pakistan. He along with Church of Pakistan’s President Bishop Azad Marshall was working on the plan in a bid to further stamp by another world-renowned religious personality that Pakistan was a land of peace and religious harmony, he added in a statement. Ashrafi, who is also Pakistan Ulema Council Chairman, said the visit of Canterbury’s Archbishop Justin Welby had projected a soft image of Pakistan internationally. He said only a few miscreants wanted to give a bad name to the country by creating religious disharmony. He said Pope Francis should come to Pakistan and witness himself that all citizens, including minorities, were enjoying their rights, as enshrined in the Constitution. He said the believers of Muslim, Christian, Hindu, Sikh or any other faith were equal citizens of the country as per the vision of its founder Quaid-e-Azam Muhammmad Ali Jinnah.
متعلقہ مضامین
-
Foreign Minister Qureshi thanks OIC Envoys for support during CFM in Niamey: FO
-
Sanitation workers honoured with ‘Dignity Awards’
-
UN General Assembly adopts Pakistan-led resolution on “Promotion of interreligious and intercultural dialogue”: FO
-
Transparency International (TI) Pakistan and World Economic Forum have appreciated NAB’s Anti Corruption efforts: Chairman NAB
-
Shehryar Afridi vows to give voice to deaf, voiceless Kashmiris
-
International community must use all tools to hold India accountable, says FO
-
Medical waste being disposed of unsafely; SEPA negligence
-
Former accountability judge Arshad Malik dies of Covid-19
-
Exports grow by 2.11pc in five months: PBS
-
PM suggests UNGA ten-point plan to avoid economic collapse in developing states
-
PM suggests UNGA ten-point plan to avoid economic collapse in developing states
-
PDM denied permission for Lahore rally