An enraged Muslim
mob beat a Christian couple to death in Pakistan and burnt their bodies in the
brick kiln where they worked on Tuesday for allegedly desecrating a Koran,
police said.
The incident took
place in the town of Kot Radha Kishan, some 60 kilometres (40 miles) southwest
of Lahore, and is the latest example of mob violence against minorities accused
of blasphemy.
“A mob attacked a
Christian couple after accusing them of desecration of the holy Koran and later
burnt their bodies at a brick kiln where they worked,” local police station
official Bin-Yameen told AFP.
“Yesterday an
incident of desecration of the holy Koran took place in the area and today the
mob first beat the couple and later set their bodies on fire at a brick kiln,”
he added.
Another police
official confirmed the incident. The victims were only identified by their
first names, Shama and Shehzad, and were a married couple.
Pakistan’s brick
kiln workers are often subject to harsh practices, with a study by the Bonded
Labour Liberation Front Pakistan estimating that 4.5 million are indentured
labourers.
Punjab Chief
Minister Shahbaz Sharif set up a three-member committee to fast track the
investigation of the killings and ordered police to beef up security at
Christian neighbourhoods in the province, an official from his media office
told AFP.
– Hugely
sensitive issue –
Blasphemy is a
hugely sensitive issue in the majority Muslim country, with even unproven
allegations often prompting mob violence.
Anyone convicted,
or even just accused, of insulting Islam, risks a violent and bloody death at
the hands of vigilantes.
A Christian woman
has been on death row since November 2010 after she was found guilty of making
derogatory remarks about the Prophet Mohammed during an argument with a Muslim
woman.
An elderly
British man with severe mental illness, sentenced to death for blasphemy in
Pakistan in January, was shot by a prison guard last month.
An internal
investigation has found that the guard had been radicalised and goaded into the
shooting by Mumtaz Qadri, a police bodyguard who murdered the Punjab governor
in 2011 for suggesting reform of the blasphemy laws.
Qadri shot dead
Punjab governor Salman Taseer at an Islamabad coffee shop. Despite the brutal
slaying, Qadri was feted as a hero by a wide section of the public including
lawyers for the murder, and was even showered with rose petals as he arrived at
court for a trial hearing.
Global rights
watchdog Amnesty International urged the Pakistani authorities to bring to
justice those responsible for the latest killing.
“This vicious mob
killing is just the latest manifestation of the threat of vigilante violence
which anyone can face in Pakistan after a blasphemy accusation –- although
religious minorities are disproportionately vulnerable,” said David Griffiths,
Amnesty International’s deputy Asia Pacific director.
“Those
responsible must be brought to justice and the Pakistani authorities have to
ensure at-risk communities are proactively given the protection they need.”
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