Stop Blasphemy misuse
this must stop | 02.09.2012 22:29 | Repression
Pakistani police have arrested a Muslim cleric who accused a Christian girl of blasphemy on suspicion that he planted evidence, a police officer said Sunday, the latest twist in a religiously charged case that has focused attention on Pakistan's harsh blasphemy laws.
The case of the Christian girl accused of allegedly burning pages of a Quran has sparked controversy at home and abroad in large part because of her age and questions about her mental capacity. It also has triggered an exodus of hundreds of Christians from the neighborhood where the accused girl lived, fearful of retribution by their Muslim neighbors.
The cleric, Khalid Chishti, was arrested late Saturday for allegedly planting pages of a Quran in a shopping bag containing burned papers and ash that had been carried by the Christian girl, said Munir Jaffery, an investigating officer in the case.
Chishti was scheduled to appear in court later Sunday.
The girl was later accused of burning pages of the Quran, a serious offense in Pakistan that can result in life in prison.
The about-face could lead to her being released from prison.
The girl's family and some human rights activists put the girl's age at as young as 11. A medical board who reviewed her case determined she was around the age of 14 and said her mental capacity did not match her age, which called into question her mental state.
Critics of Pakistan's blasphemy laws say they can be used to settle vendettas or seek retribution. Many of Pakistan's minorities, including Christians, live in fear of being accused of the offense.
People accused of the crime, even those that aren't convicted, often face vigilante justice by outraged Pakistanis. A Pakistani man accused of blasphemy in July was dragged from a police station in the center of the country, beaten to death and his body set on fire.
Few are willing to tackle the explosive issue after two prominent politicians who criticized the law were murdered last year. One was killed by his own bodyguard, who then attracted adoring crowds. The Pakistani government has been largely silent on the girl's case.
The case of the Christian girl accused of allegedly burning pages of a Quran has sparked controversy at home and abroad in large part because of her age and questions about her mental capacity. It also has triggered an exodus of hundreds of Christians from the neighborhood where the accused girl lived, fearful of retribution by their Muslim neighbors.
The cleric, Khalid Chishti, was arrested late Saturday for allegedly planting pages of a Quran in a shopping bag containing burned papers and ash that had been carried by the Christian girl, said Munir Jaffery, an investigating officer in the case.
Chishti was scheduled to appear in court later Sunday.
The girl was later accused of burning pages of the Quran, a serious offense in Pakistan that can result in life in prison.
The about-face could lead to her being released from prison.
The girl's family and some human rights activists put the girl's age at as young as 11. A medical board who reviewed her case determined she was around the age of 14 and said her mental capacity did not match her age, which called into question her mental state.
Critics of Pakistan's blasphemy laws say they can be used to settle vendettas or seek retribution. Many of Pakistan's minorities, including Christians, live in fear of being accused of the offense.
People accused of the crime, even those that aren't convicted, often face vigilante justice by outraged Pakistanis. A Pakistani man accused of blasphemy in July was dragged from a police station in the center of the country, beaten to death and his body set on fire.
Few are willing to tackle the explosive issue after two prominent politicians who criticized the law were murdered last year. One was killed by his own bodyguard, who then attracted adoring crowds. The Pakistani government has been largely silent on the girl's case.
this must stop
Comments
Hide the following 3 comments
wrong country
02.09.2012 22:46
not in the uk
@Wrong Country
02.09.2012 22:50
Whats all this then
Demo report
03.09.2012 07:41
Religious and Faith intolerance is regretfully a growing problem in all cultures but particularistic in those Muslim countries that are seeing their populations question the doctrine handed down by clerics. In some ways this is a replication of the events in Europe during the Reformation when the Catholic Church lost its power and people's questioning of the absolute right of clerics to interpret the 'word of God' resulted in a Liberalisation of edicts.
For many moderate Muslims (including myself) the opportunity to reform our faith is very much overdue with the disproportional influence of the Middle East dictatorships now beginning to crumble.
Reporter
Homepage: http://london.indymedia.org/articles/12715