http://www.smh.com.au/world/islamic-groups-in-pakistan-support-christian-girl-on-blasphemy-charge-20120828-24yur.html


Islamic groups in Pakistan support Christian girl on blasphemy charge
  Date   August 29, 2012 
Saeed Shah
 
A family rides past the locked house of Rimsha Masih, a Pakistani Christian 
girl accused of blasphemy, on the outskirts of Islamabad. Photo: Reuters/Faisal 
Mahmood

ISLAMABAD: Islamic leaders in Pakistan have come out in support of a Christian 
girl with learning difficulties who is being held in prison, in an 
unprecedented public denunciation of the blasphemy law by hardline mullahs.

The All Pakistan Ulema Council, an umbrella group of Muslim clerics and 
scholars, which includes representatives from fundamentalist groups, joined 
hands with the Pakistan Interfaith League, which includes Christians, Sikhs and 
other religions, to call for justice for the girl, Rimsha, who is accused of 
blasphemy. They demanded that those making false allegations be punished.

The chairman of the Ulema Council, Tahir Ashrafi, warned that the ''law of the 
jungle'' was gripping Pakistan, with police routinely pressured by baying mobs 
to register blasphemy charges, as happened in the case of Rimsha, which has 
made headlines around the world.

 
Tahir Naveed Chaudhry, the lawyer of a Christian girl accused of blasphemy. 
Photo: AFP

Rimsha, 11, whose family says she has Down syndrome, was charged this month 
with desecrating the Koran. The case has shocked the country's Christian 
population. Rimsha's own community, who were living in a poor Christian-Muslim 
enclave in Islamabad, were driven out of their homes by a crowd.

Rimsha has been held in a maximum security jail, where her lawyer says she is 
deeply traumatised and begging to be released. Her parents have been taken into 
protective custody.

''We see Rimsha as a test case for Pakistan's Muslims, Pakistan's minorities 
and for the government,'' Mr Ashrafi said. ''We don't want to see injustice 
done with anyone. We will work to end this climate of fear.''

''This is the first time in the history of Pakistan that the Muslim community 
and scholars have stood up for non-Muslims,'' said Sajid Ishaq, chairman of the 
Pakistan Interfaith League. ''We are together, demanding justice, demanding an 
unbiased investigation. And those abusing this law should be taken care of.''

It is dangerous in Pakistan even to discuss blasphemy, which carries the death 
penalty. The law is frequently used to level false allegations in order to 
settle scores. The police and the courts are usually too afraid to investigate 
the validity of the claims, leading to convictions on hearsay.

All of Rimsha's community, about 300 Christian families, are now living with 
relatives or in shelters elsewhere in Islamabad.

Guardian News & Media


Read more: 
http://www.smh.com.au/world/islamic-groups-in-pakistan-support-christian-girl-on-blasphemy-charge-20120828-24yur.html#ixzz24rjhmMpf


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke