The US Commission on International Religious Freedom, which advises the government on policy but does not take action on its own, urged the State Department to add Pakistan to its list of "countries of particular concern" subject to potential sanctions.
In an annual report, the commission said Pakistan "represents the worst situation in the world for religious freedom" among countries that are not already on the US blacklist and that conditions in the past year "hit an all-time low."
"The Ahmadi minority Muslims in Pakistan live under something really resembling an apartheid-like system subject to severe legal restrictions," said George, comparing the situation to South Africa's 1948-1994 system of forced racial separation.
"They suffer from officially sanctioned discrimination, not just social or cultural prejudice," he told reporters.
Ahmadis have faced a series of deadly attacks and desecration of their graves. Ahmadis boycotted last year's election because they would have had to identify themselves as non-Muslims.
Ahmadi theology differs from that of other groups identifying themselves as Muslimsby believing that its 19th-century founder, Ghulam Ahmad, was a messiah after the Prophet Mohammed.
The United States has urged Pakistan to improve its treatment of religious minorities but has stopped short of putting the country --an uneasy ally in the Afghanistan war -- on the blacklist.
The United States designates eight nations as countries of particular concern: China, Eritrea, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Uzbekistan. The commission urged the State Department redesignate all of them.
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