Second Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan
The Second Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan (Urdu: آئین پاکستان میں دوسری ترمیم) became a part of the Constitution of Pakistan on September 7, 1974 under the Government of Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.[1] It declared that Ahmadis were non-Muslims.[1]
Text
A person who does not believe in the absolute and unqualified finality of The Prophethood of Muhammad , the last of the Prophets or claims to be a Prophet, in any sense of the word or of any description whatsoever, after Muhammad , or recognizes such a claimant as a Prophet or religious reformer, is non-Muslim for the purposes of the Constitution or law.
gollark: If I want to erase one, the raw "ES" bitstream would slow it down somewhat.
gollark: NVMe SSDs these days?
gollark: 0.5ish GB/s of random numbers is NOT acceptable.
gollark: But `yes` can run at a few tens of GB/s if optimized.
gollark: Ah yes, the "edexcel large data set".
See also
References
- Government of Pakistan, (GoPAK). "Second Amendment". Ministry of Law and Justice. The Electronic Government of Pakistan.
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