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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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November 2, 2018
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Violence
Continues as Pakistani Islamists Protest Christian Woman's
"Blasphemy" Acquittal
by IPT News • Nov 2, 2018 at 9:15
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Thousands of Islamist demonstrators in Pakistan continue to violently protest the acquittal of Asia
Bibi, a Christian woman who was falsely accused of blasphemy and spent the
last eight years on death row.
Protesters clashed with police, burned cars and disrupted traffic,
blocking ambulances. Schools across Pakistan have been closed and a major
zone in Islamabad is sealed off.
Asia Bibi was charged in 2009 with insulting Islam's prophet Muhammad
after drinking from a cup of water before allowing fellow Muslim farm
laborers drink first. After being beaten in her home, Bibi's accusers say
that she confessed to blasphemy. She was sentenced to death in 2010.
On Wednesday, Pakistan's Supreme Court overturned her sentence. For that, the Supreme Court
judges "deserve to be killed," said Muhammad Afzal
Qadri, leader of the extremist Islamist Tehreek-i-Labaik party. But Bibi
has not been released from prison, as negotiations for her safety broke down between the government and Islamists.
"Which government can function like this, blackmailed by
protests?" asked Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan, accusing the
Islamists for "inciting [people] for their own political gain."
Radical religious groups, including a charity founded by UN-designated
terrorist Hafiz Saeed, vowed to join the protests today.
Public support for blasphemy laws in Pakistan remains high, driving a
wedge between the ruling party and extreme Islamists stoking protests. And
that sentiment is not limited to South Asia.
A Maryland mosque last year praised the terrorist who killed a former Pakistani
governor critical of Pakistan's blasphemy laws. Salman Taseer was targeted
by radical Islamists after he defended Bibi. In 2011, his bodyguard Mumtaz
Qadri shot and killed him.
American Islamist groups said
nothing about Taseer's killing.
After Qadri was executed for the killing in 2016, the Gulzar E Madina
mosque hosted a celebration in his memory, "attended by
dozens of people including young children and teenagers."
Radical Islamists in Pakistan, whether organized terrorist groups or
mobs of people, often take matters into their hands.
In April 2017, a violent mob beat to death a university student who faced a
blasphemy accusation that investigators later deemed false.
Sunni terrorist groups connected to extremist Pakistani organizations
last year targeted minorities in several deadly attacks including Ahmadi
Muslims, the Shi'a Hazara community, and Christians.
In December, for example, Islamic State terrorists killed nine civilians
in a targeted
attack involving a suicide bomber against a Methodist church in Quetta.
Pakistan has charged about 1,000 people with blasphemy since 1987,
and convictions can carry the death penalty. These laws especially target
members of Pakistan's minority communities. But the law can be also applied
to anyone that is seen as a threat to the government.
According to the US State Department's International Religious Freedom Report for 2017, civil
society organizations "reported lower courts often failed to adhere to
basic evidentiary standards in blasphemy cases."
Asia Bibi's acquittal highlights the plight of all religious minorities
in Pakistan and the destructive power of radical Islamists across the
country.
Related Topics: IPT News, blasphemy
laws, Asia
Bibi, Pakistan,
Salman
Taseer, Tehreek-i-Labaik,
Muhammad
Afzal Qadri, Imran
Khan, Mumtaz
Qadri, Gulzar
E Madina mosque, International
Religious Freedom Report
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