Pakistani Christians, police, clash after neighborhood torched


By Mubasher Bukhari

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Hundreds of Pakistani Christians took to the streets 
across the country on Sunday, demanding better protection after a Christian 
neighborhood was torched in the city of Lahore a day earlier in connection with 
the country's controversial anti-blasphemy law.

Police fired into the air in Lahore and the country's largest city, Karachi, to 
try to disperse protesters furious at the arson attack, which caused no 
casualties and was the result of an allegation of blasphemy.

Rights campaigners say the anti-blasphemy law in Pakistan is widely used 
against religious minorities, including Christians, Ahmadis and Shi'ite 
Muslims, usually on flimsy pretexts.

Aside from a Taliban insurgency, U.S. ally Pakistan is facing hardline Sunni 
groups who are determined to wipe out the Shi'ite minority. Suicide bombings 
have killed over 200 Shi'ites this year, triggering revenge attacks against 
Sunnis.

Christian protesters smashed the windows of buses and clashed with 
baton-wielding police in Lahore, near the Saint Joseph Colony neighborhood that 
was set on fire.

A protest in another Christian neighborhood of the city turned violent when 
protesters blocked the main road and attacked vehicles, police said. In 
Karachi, Christian protesters threw stones at shop windows.

"We tried to disperse them peacefully ... They started throwing stones at 
police, resulting in several officers receiving injuries," senior Lahore police 
official Rai Tahir told Reuters.

Elsewhere throughout Punjab province, Christians held small, peaceful protests.

Punjab's Law Minister condemned the protests: "We will bring the culprits 
(arsonists) to the gallows ... But Christians should not take the law into 
their hands".

Tahir said more than 150 Muslims were arrested in Lahore of suspicion of 
torching the homes, and will be tried in anti-terrorism courts. Hundreds of 
residents had fled their homes, escaping the violence.

In Islam, allegations of blasphemy are treated seriously. Police said two men, 
one Christian and one Muslim, argued in Lahore on Friday, leading to the 
Christian being accused of blasphemy. He is reportedly in police custody.

The recent case of a young Pakistani Christian girl accused by a cleric of 
burning pages of the Koran highlighted the danger of the country's 
anti-blasphemy law for ordinary Pakistanis, including Muslims outside the Sunni 
majority.

(Writing by Amie Ferris-Rotman; Editing by Michael Georgy and Giles Elgood)

© Thomson Reuters 2011. All rights reserved. 



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