Outraged Pakistani Christians took to the streets of Lahore on Sunday, protesting a rash of violence against their community over the weekend.
Some of the hundreds of
protesters Sunday threw stones at police, saying the government failed
to adequately protect Christians, Lahore senior police official Rai
Tahir said.
Tahir said video footage
of the fires helped lead to the arrests of more than 150 attackers. He
said charges of terrorism have been filed against the suspects.
The violence that tore
through Lahore's Badami Bagh community Saturday followed the arrest of
Sawan Masih, a Christian in his 20s accused of blasphemy.
But Masih's arrest wasn't enough to appease an angry mob of Muslims irate over the alleged crime.
"(The) mob wanted police to hand them over the alleged blasphemer," said Hafiz Majid, a senior police official in Badami Bagh.
The mob also looted some shops run by Christians, he said.
Majid said Christians have fled the area for fear of being killed.
If convicted, Masih faces the death penalty.
He denies the allegations made by the two men who filed the blasphemy complaint against him with police on Friday, Majid said.
Masih said the three got
into an argument while drinking and that the other two men threatened
to publicly accuse him of blasphemy, according to Majid.
"The attack is yet
another shameful incident against a vulnerable community and further
confirmation of the slide toward extremism in society on the one hand
and, on the other hand, the apathy and inaction that has become the norm
among the police," the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said in a
statement.
The group accused police
of arresting Christians in the incident "while those who went on a
rampage and can easily be identified from television footage have gone
scot-free."
Pakistan's blasphemy
laws were first instituted to keep peace between religions. But they
have been criticized by human rights advocates who say the laws enable
legal discrimination against religious minorities. At time, the laws
have been misused to settle personal differences between Muslims and
Christians.
There have been about
1,400 blasphemy cases since the laws were first enacted in 1986,
according to U.S.-based Human Rights Watch. There are more than 15 cases
of people on death row for blasphemy in Pakistan, and more than 50
people have been killed while facing trial for the charge, according to
the organization.
Last year, a Pakistani court dismissed blasphemy charges against a Christian teenager whose case prompted international outrage.
Her detention stirred up
religious tensions in the predominantly Muslim country. It also
generated fierce criticism of Pakistani authorities and renewed debate
over Pakistan's blasphemy laws.
President Asif Ali
Zardari issued a statement Saturday on the most recent "unfortunate
incident." He noted that the country's constitution protects the rights
of all Pakistanis, and that "such acts of vandalism against minorities
tarnish the image of the country."
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