First It Was Lynch Mobs. Now Police Kill Pakistanis Accused of Blasphemy.

By The New York Times (World News) | Created at 2024-09-26 04:05:09 | Updated at 2024-09-30 07:34:07 4 days ago
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Asia Pacific|First It Was Lynch Mobs. Now Police Kill Pakistanis Accused of Blasphemy.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/26/world/asia/pakistan-blasphemy.html

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The deaths of two men have reverberated across Pakistan, where the charge of insulting Islam has long been a sensitive issue.

Three women in Pakistan sit on the ground, in front of a row of microphones.
From left, the mother, wife and daughter of Shah Nawaz. The family has accused the police in southern Pakistan of killing Mr. Nawaz, a doctor who was accused of blasphemy.Credit...Allah Bux/Associated Press

By Zia ur-Rehman

Reporting from Karachi, Pakistan

Sept. 26, 2024, 12:01 a.m. ET

The entrance to the district police headquarters in southern Pakistan was carpeted with rose petals, a grand gesture of respect. A crowd filled the air with chants of Islamic slogans. Many carried garlands and flower bouquets to laud the officers for their actions.

The throngs were ecstatic because the police had killed a man. His supposed crime: “blasphemous content” on social media.

The man, a 36-year-old government doctor, had been shot “unintentionally” as he resisted arrest, the authorities claimed. But human rights groups called it an extrajudicial killing, the second such one in a week. On Sept. 12, a 52-year-old man in custody on suspicion of blasphemy was shot dead inside a police station in southwestern Pakistan.

The cases have reverberated across the nation, highlighting the volatile nature of Pakistan’s religious landscape. Blasphemy, a legal offense that can carry the death penalty, has long been a sensitive issue in a country that is more than 96 percent Muslim. Even a mere accusation can be deadly; mobs sometimes lynch people before their cases can go to trial.

Rights activists have expressed concerns over the government’s tolerance of hard-line Islamist groups and over surging violence among their supporters after blasphemy allegations. The killings of the two men this month have ignited fears that the police, pressured by the mob actions, may now be taking matters into their own hands, too.

Image

A gathering in Peshawar, Pakistan, in February by protesters accusing the country’s chief justice of blasphemy.Credit...Arshad Arbab/EPA, via Shutterstock

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