The letter enumerated a wide array of issues facing religious minorities in Pakistan, ranging from archaic blasphemy laws to mass violence and attacks on religious sites to the forced conversion of more than 1,000 Hindu and Christian girls annually.
Signatories to the letter were part of International Religious Freedom (IRF) Roundtable, a non-affiliated body of organisations and individuals that regularly convenes in Washington to address global human rights and religious freedom concerns.
"The broad-based coalition comprising of Hindu, Christian, Muslim, and atheist groups and leaders sent a clear message to President Obama that religious freedom in Pakistan is an urgent matter that must be addressed in any bilateral discussions with Prime Minister Sharif," said Jay Kansara, HAF's director of Government Relations.
"Conditions for religious minorities in Pakistan are deteriorating at an alarming rate and can no longer be ignored by the US," Kansara said in a statement.
"And unless the US shifts its policy priorities with Pakistan to supporting civil society, democratization initiatives, human rights, and religious freedom, the atmosphere of religious intolerance and extremism will only increase," he said.
