Idlam itu emang agama biadab...

الأحد 01 شوال 
1433هـ - 19 أغسطس 2012م
Down's syndrome Pakistani girl accused of blasphemy
Tens of thousands rallied in 2011 against proposed changes to blasphemy laws. 
(AFP)     

AFP, ISLAMABAD

A Christian girl with Down's Syndrome has been arrested on blasphemy charges in 
Pakistan, accused of burning pages inscribed with verses from the Koran, police 
and activists said on Sunday. Police arrested Rimsha, who is recognized by a 
single name, on Thursday after she was reported holding in public burnt pages 
which had Islamic text and Koranic verses on them, a police official told AFP.

A conviction for blasphemy is punishable by death in Pakistan.

The official said that the girl, who he described as being in her teens, was 
taken to a police station in the capital Islamabad, where she has been detained 
since.

Angry Muslim protesters held rallies demanding she be punished, said the 
official, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case.

"We had to register the case fairly quickly to prevent any unpleasant 
situation," he added, referring to the demonstrations.

Rimsha was produced before a court on Friday and remanded in custody for 14 
days, another police official said. She is expected to go before the court 
again by end of this month.

The girl's plight is likely to reignite debate about growing religious 
intolerance in Muslim-majority Pakistan, where strict anti-blasphemy laws make 
defaming Islam or the Prophet Mohammed, or desecrating the Koran, a capital 
offence.

Human rights activists say the law is often used to settle petty disputes, but 
in the face of huge public support for the legislation, the government says it 
has no plans to change it.

The girl's alleged behaviour sparked Muslim anger in Mehrabad, an area of the 
capital where she lives with her parents and where up to 800 Christians reside. 
Christians there were forced to leave amid mounting fury.

"These Christians had sought shelter with their relatives in other parts of the 
city but now they are gradually returning to Mehrabad," a senior official of 
All Pakistan Minorities Alliance (APMA), Tahir Naveed Chaudhry, told AFP.

He said that the girl had Down's Syndrome -- a condition which causes various 
degrees of learning difficulties -- and disputed the age given by police.

"She was just 11 to 12 years old," he said, adding it was a hugely sensitive 
issue and "we would not like it to be mishandled and would rather want to 
resolve it amicably".

Women's Action Forum (WAF), a leading Pakistani organization fighting for the 
rights of women, condemned Rimsha's arrest.

"WAF is outraged at the total inhumanity of the men who lodged the First 
Information Report (FIR) in the police," WAF spokeswoman Tahira Abdullah said, 
demanding Rimsha's immediate release.

Police should have dealt with the case under the Juvenile Justice System and 
not the serious allegation of blasphemy, she said, accusing police of not 
allowing lawyers or civil society representatives to visit the girl in custody.

جميع الحقوق 
محفوظة لقناة 
العربية © 2010




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