Police save Christian couple from ‘blasphemy’ mob in Pakistan

 

Police saved a Christian couple near Pakistani city of Lahore, from a mob who were attempting to lynch them for allegedly committing blasphemy. They arrested a cleric for inciting the violence.

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 blasphemy accusations, even unproven ones, result in a bloody death by mobs.

According to Sohail Zafar Chattha, the district police chief, the illiterate Christian couple had obtained an old panaflex advertisement 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 Holy Quran, 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 said.

“Police intervened in time and rescued the couple from the mob, who were later shifted to Lahore and were handed over 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.

Tough blasphemy laws, which carry the death sentence for insulting the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) or Islam in any way, are often falsely used against minorities and the poor by those wishing to settle personal scores.

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,” said a Christian human rights lawyer Nadeem Anthony, 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 laborer 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 rumors they had thrown pages of the Quran into the garbage.

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