Pakistan's Dangerous Islamist Intolerance
"Clearly, in Pakistan, evidence is not required where the issue of blasphemy is concerned, and mobs take it upon themselves to dispense 'justice'.""[Do] the rulers -- politicians and establishment -- as well as clerics and prominent society figures have the courage to confront this madness?"Pakistan's Dawn editorial"[I was] gutted [by the images coming out of Faisalabad].""Stern action would be taken against those who violate law and target minorities. All law enforcement has been asked to apprehend culprits and bring them to justice."Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar"[I am] deeply pained and distressed.""We cry out for justice and action from law enforcement and those who dispense justice and the safety of all citizens to intervene immediately and assure us that our lives are valuable in our own homeland that has just celebrated independence and freedom."Christian leader Bishop Azad Marshall
In this photo provided by district police office, a police officer pours water into a burning house in a Christian neighborhood in Jaranwala, near Faisalabad, Pakistan, Wednesday. District Police Office via/AP |
A
Muslim mob in Pakistan, enraged over rumours that Christian Pakistanis
had desecrated a Koran, went on a violent rampage of burning and looting
and destroying Christian churches and the homes of Christians living in
the country's east. Miraculously, no deaths took place, nor serious
injuries despite the large scale of the rampage. Such mob violence takes
place from time to time in Pakistan, one of several Islamic-majority
countries with capital punishment laws against blasphemy.
Islamist
clerics are known to whip their followers to a frenzy of anger over the
very presence of Christians living in their midst. Hostilities between
religious sects are not unknown anywhere, but in Pakistan they take in
lethal qualities. Even politicians who attempt to support the presumed
equal rights of non-Muslims in Pakistan have been assassinated for their
efforts in hoping to establish a reasonable aura of civilized conduct
toward Christians.
Unpredictable riots are known to break out and allowed to rage on viciously before anyone in authority appears to take notice. In
2010 a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, offended her workmates when she
tried to drink from a communal source and her Muslim coworkers became
angry that she would make the water unfit for them to drink. They
accused her to authorities of taking the name of the Prophet in vain,
and she was arrested, convicted and sentenced to death. When a Pakistani
court finally found her not guilty, mobs roamed the streets demanding
her death.
In
the instance of Wednesday's mob actions representing some of the most
serious sectarian violence outbreaks in recent years, police response
was slow to break up the riots in Jaranwala, giving the mob ample time
to deface and destroy a number of Christian churches, to enter people's
homes and loot them, driving away with their gains, setting fire to the
home interiors, effectively dispossessing the people whose homes they
were, including those of priests.
The
slow response to re-establish order in Jaranwala described by
witnesses, raised questions whether officials in Pakistan are interested
in dedicating resources sufficient to protect the country's religious
minorities from the rabid hatred of fanatical Islamists. The global
intake of breath over this latest manifestation of vicious intolerance
obviously gave the government something to think about, and this time
the response was a little more forceful, in the arrest of some 130
people who had lead the mobs.
Pakistan
is a country of 248 million Sunni Muslims among whom Pakistan's
Christians represent a mere two percent of the population. And in that
country acts of sectarian violence most frequently target Christians.
Police raids on Thursday in Jaranwala finally made an effort to counter
this most recent mob violence targeting Christians where false charges
of blasphemy often originate from sources interested in 'settling
scores' as a method of putting Christians 'in their place'.
Pakistani
authorities claim their response was timely, and their intervention
served to prevent worse events from occurring. An estimated 6,000 people
appear to have taken part in the riots. Before the enraged mob's
frenzied attacks most Christians fled temporarily out of their community
hoping to find safety elsewhere. Once thousands of paramilitary troops
were deployed, authorities declared the situation under control.
Labels: Christian Pakistanis Attacked, Fanatical Islamists, Mob Violence, Pakistan's Blasphemy Laws
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