In a blistering attack on those who remain mute in the face of Palestinian suffering, JUI-F leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman claimed on Sunday that the United Nations and other international organizations were manipulating Pakistani officials.
While speaking at an event in the Babuzai area of Katlang tehsil in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa’s Mardan district, Fazl said, “International human rights organisations make our decisions, rendering our own Constitution and laws ineffective.”
The head of the JUI-F expressed his dismay that the country’s defense was constrained by international accords and that the World Bank was exerting control over the economy.
“Pakistan possesses nuclear weapons, but it lacks the legal capacity to deploy them,” he further stated.
According to Fazl, human rights activists voiced strong condemnations when madrassa teachers physically assaulted their students, but remained mute when it came to the brutality in Palestine.
“The genocide of Palestinian people is being watched by the world,” he went on to say.
The treatment of the Palestinians by the Zionist forces is a source of shame for all of humanity. “They have been let down by the UN Security Council and human rights organizations,” he bemoaned.
The madrassas were the target of a “conspiracy” that the Maulana vowed to expose and foil. He went on to say that they would always adhere to the lessons they had received in the madrassas.
They were being attacked for who they were, according to Fazl, who said that their ancestors had sacrificed for the nation. The head of the JUI-F insisted that 75 years had gone since Pakistan was established in the name of kalima, but the Muslim authorities of today still didn’t get it.
The independence of this nation, according to the Maulana, was at jeopardy because blasphemy was being committed in it by foreign agents.
Additionally, he mentioned that there is pressure on our economy and politics. According to the JUI-F chief, his party is dedicated to helping the country recover economically and protecting human rights. In his final remarks, he made it clear that “gun politics” was not something his party approved of.