http://dawn.com/2013/03/09/attack-on-christians-hrw-demands-action-against-religious-militants/

Attack on Christians: HRW demands action against religious militants
DAWN.COM | 


 
Pakistani Christians shout slogans in Karachi during a protest against the 
attack on the homes of members of the Christian community in Lahore on 
Saturday. – Photo by AFP

KARACHI: Pakistan’s government should immediately take legal action against 
Islamist militant groups and others responsible for threats and violence 
against minorities and other vulnerable groups, Human Rights Watch demanded on 
Saturday in the aftermath of devastating attacks on Christian minority in 
Lahore.

While international and Pakistani human rights groups have long called for the 
reform or repeal of the blasphemy law, it has come under renewed scrutiny after 
a mob torched dozens of houses located in a Christian neighbourhood in Lahore, 
forcing hundreds of Christians to flee.

An enraged mob attacked the houses in Joseph Colony following allegations of 
blasphemy against a Christian man. The man was booked under Section 295-C of 
the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC).

“The Punjab provincial government has spent almost its entire 5-year term in 
office being in denial about threats to minorities,” said Ali Dayan Hasan, 
Pakistan director at Human Rights Watch, in a statement issued from New York.

“Unless Pakistan’s federal and provincial authorities are following a policy of 
willful discrimination, law enforcement authorities need to put aside their 
prejudices and protect religious minorities who are clearly in serious danger,” 
he said.

Social persecution and legal discrimination against religious minorities has 
become particularly widespread in Punjab province.

The HRW has urged the provincial government, controlled by former prime 
minister Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), to investigate 
and prosecute as appropriate campaigns of intimidation, threats, and violence 
against Christians, Ahmadis, and other vulnerable groups.

The Human Rights Watch has also urged concerned governments and 
intergovernmental bodies to press the Pakistani government to repeal sections 
295 and 298 of the Pakistan Penal Code, which includes the blasphemy law and 
anti-Ahmadiyya laws.

Pakistan’s “Blasphemy Law,” as section 295-C of the penal code is known, makes 
the death penalty effectively mandatory for blasphemy.

“The ugly fact is that the blasphemy law is an enabler of mob violence against 
vulnerable groups,” said Hasan.

“As long as such laws remain on the books and the authorities remain unwilling 
or unable to rein in mobs playing judge, jury and executioner, Pakistan will 
remain plagued by abuse in the name of religion,” he added.


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