Pakistani police save Christian couple from 'blasphemy' mob

Homepage Forums Theism Pakistani police save Christian couple from 'blasphemy' mob

This topic contains 2 replies, has 3 voices, and was last updated by  Faisal Aslam 8 years, 8 months ago.

Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #74

    Rebel
    Keymaster

    Police in Pakistan saved a Christian couple from a Muslim mob who were attempting to lynch them for allegedly committing blasphemy, and later arrested a cleric for inciting the violence, a senior officer said Thursday.

    The incident, which took place in the village of Makki in Punjab province on Tuesday, represents a rare successful intervention by authorities in a country where even unproven allegations of blasphemy can result in a bloody death at the hands of vigilantes.

    Sohail Zafar Chattha, the district police chief, told AFP the illiterate Christian couple had obtained an old panaflex advertisement awning which contained the names and slogans of various colleges, which they were using as a mat to sleep on in their home.

    Arabic inscriptions, allegedly from the Koran, were found among the colleges’ slogans, leading one local barber as well as two clerics to accuse the couple of committing blasphemy.

    “Muslims of the town gathered there and dragged the poor couple who didn’t know what they had done. They were being beaten to death,” Chattha wrote on Facebook.

    “Police intervened in time and rescued the couple from the mob and shifted them to Lahore and handed over them to the elders of Christian community,” he later told AFP.

    Police have arrested one of the clerics while the other and the barber remain at large, he said. Some residents interviewed by the police said the barber may have been interested in obtaining the couple’s house.

    Pakistan’s tough blasphemy laws, which carry the death sentence for insulting the Prophet Muhammad, are often invoked against minorities and the poor by those wishing to settle personal scores, according to rights groups.

    Nadeem Anthony, a Christian human rights lawyer, hailed the police action.

    “It is a positive development that the police is taking its duty seriously and protecting the accused in such cases,” he said, adding he could recount three other instances where authorities had stepped in in time.

    “If the state and its organs continue to perform their duties, the elements who take the law into their own hands will be discouraged,” he added.

    Christians, who make up around two percent of Pakistan’s mostly Muslim population of 200 million, have been increasingly targeted in recent years, by both mob violence and militant attacks.

    Bonded labourer Shehzad Masih and his pregnant wife Shama Bibi were beaten by a mob of 1,500 people then thrown into a lit furnace last year in a crazed reaction to rumours they had thrown pages of the Koran into the garbage.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pakistani-police-save-christian-couple-blasphemy-mob-152210783.html

    #80

    MyInsideVoice
    Participant

    I guess this mob (and the dozens of others we’ve read about already this year) was made up of just the tiny percentage of muslims who distort the teachings of Muhammed (FTUB) and simply want to eat sandwiches and live in peace. The vast majority happened to be out of town at a picnic, or something?

    It’s also worth pointing out that the policeman had a responsibility to turn that couple over, not to “Christian Elders” but to a magistrate to be tried and then executed. What they did was actually illegal and punishable by death in Pakistan. They put an awning that had verses from the Koran on the ground. That is actually punishable by death in Pakistan. The policeman did the right and moral thing, of course, from our point of view, but in the eyes of Allah and in the eyes of the Pakistani state, he’s a criminal, and also punishable by death.

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 8 months ago by  MyInsideVoice.
    #150

    Faisal Aslam
    Participant

    The whole blasphemy thing should stop in Pakistan. People should not be killed for what they believe. Also if someone have done something according to law thej he must be punished by law enforcing agencies and not people.

Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.