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A Sri Lankan national lynched in Sialkot by mob of terrorists for blasphemy

Yeah and let the police deal with it, that's there fcuking job, put pressure on police and government to ensure
Dude you'll be the first one to cry foul if Britain were to have Pakistan style blasphemy laws.
What's ironic is none of you can discuss about blasphemy ,it's accepted that a kaafir can be killed for some frivolous reasons
This whole thread and entirety of Pakistan internet disagrees. Everyone is condemning this murder and demanding swift justice. Infact I urge you to use this thread and threads about Indian lynching minorities as case studies to gauge overall approach of both nations towards mob violence
 
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Absolutely horrible. India and Pakistan both countries are ticking time-bombs and these incidents are just the initial sparks. Our populations reflect extremely poor investment outcomes in human development and education. South Asia (basically just India and Pakistan) is a sinking ship, get out while you can.

Yes. There is something really rotten in following religions in the Subcontinent, especially in India and Pakistan. Really rotten! The region is full of 'potentials' even if not naturally endowed. But the filth and tolerance of filth, both of physical and mental types, is high. The religious intolerance is very high. Mountains are made out of moles in the two countries. Not even when there is some real reasons for violence, the populations in both countries keep coming up with excuses for horrific violence. One could explain the violence in places like Haiti to some degree but in India and Pakistan, I find no explanations except, as you said, 'poor investment outcomes in human development and education'.
 
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Its time for you to come up with sorry excuses like its just a group not the national mentality... By the way the topic of this thread is blasphemy and lynching in Pakistan, not India..
irrelevant oral farts as usual. he said he can't recognize if is a burning human body and I simply pointed that he should be able to recognize it since indians are far more experienced in lynching unarmed people on a daily basis than we will ever be, it's a well known fact.
 
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Listen dopey, shit happens

It's happens across the world

Muslims have been attacked and lynched in both India and Sri Lanka


The same Hindus who support attack on Indian Muslims were crying victim tears when Hindus were attacked In Bangladesh last month


The world can be a shitty place, it's up to the police now to make arrests and set an example


Why are you having a period and getting so emotional

This is the subcontinent bruv, hundreds of millions of emotional, right wing, conservative types that will seek blood for any perceived slight

This isn't a pissing contest on how who is the most barbaric.
 
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Dude you'll be the first one to cry foul if Britain were to have Pakistan style blasphemy laws.

Sure, welcome to human nature

We are a overwhelmingly conservative, reactive and right wing in nature state


A set of circumstances matched across the sub continent


The sub continent is unparalleled in the ability of mobs to lynch at the smallest slight

An injustice has occured and now it's up to the police, to arrest, prosecute and for the government and state to stand behind that prosecution



No government can go against this overwhelming and conservative reactive nature of our people, not unless it has overwhelming majority and backing of all state apparatus and opposition with massive public support



People keep talking about the TLP, do you know why we can't do much against the TLP, it's because the numbers of highly conservative types in Pakistan is simply too large and the will of Government will break in the backlash against so many people


Its a reality of the situation





When Indian Muslims were lynched do you think these idol worshipers give a fcuk Delhi was burning in riots only last year


Sri Lankans did the same thing in 2018



Bangladeshi just bitch slapped the hindus in riots

Welcome to the sub continent




Hell the Americans and British have launched unnecessary wars for decades killing millions



Our efforts should be now centered on police getting justice and punishing criminals with state and popular support
 
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This whole thread and entirety of Pakistan internet disagrees. Everyone is condemning this murder and demanding swift justice. Infact I urge you to use this thread and threads about Indian lynching minorities as case studies to gauge overall approach of both nations towards mob violence
We all know his intentions. You can check all the lynching threads of India and you will either find them making it look like some personal feud or something that has never happened or worse posting news of Muslim lynching christians or dalits. I would suggest you not to engage such double faced people. We don't owe them any explanation or even a discourse.
 
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Man gets murdered by a mob and look at this calmness. One word, psychopath.
Which part of my comment do you not agree with? A) The fact that these things are for the courts to deal with and not some random mob or B) Punishment for blasphemy should be death?
 
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he province is doing better than the rest economically as well. It boggles the mind as to where this is stemming from.

You know that poor people don't have time for philosophical quests. It is the well-fed self-important defenders of faith who take it upon themselves to drive such fanatic movements; they have the time and the money. Poor people sometimes join them for money.
 
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Unless the perpetrators are hanged it’s all the usual kaghzi karwai. I have not seen a weaker state than Pakistan.

Not a single person was hanged in IK's govt. This was RS who started hanging the criminals and terrorists again after decades and this policy was also abandoned after IK came to power.
 
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Yes, I think EU are better, at least in their country..


Did you see any protests or concerns on this news?


1 in 3 people working at Australia's parliament are sexually harassed, a report finds
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November 30, 202111:56 AM ET
DEEPA SHIVARAM
Twitter
ap21334383669883-58d073ccaaadb6492aa46d3f3686fc95a942632a-s1100-c50.jpg


Members of the Australian Parliament are sworn in on the first day of Federal Government in Canberra in 2008. An Australian government-commissioned report released on Tuesday, Nov. 30, revealed the alarming extent of sexual harassment among those working for some of its highest legislative and elected offices.
Mark Graham/AP
A new report from Australia has found that one in three people working for parliamentary offices in the country has been sexually harassed, detailing a widely concerning culture of abuse in Australia's highest governmental offices.
The 456 page report, commissioned by Australia's government, included interviews and surveys with more than 1,000 participants who are current and former employees in parliament.
Titled "Set the Standard," the report showed that women experienced a higher rate of sexual harassment, bullying and sexual assault than men. Forty percent of women experienced sexual harassment there compared to 26% of men. More people who identify as LGBTQ+ experienced harassment compared with than those who identify as heterosexual — 53% compared to 31%.
The report also found that 63% of female parliamentarians experienced sexual harassment, compared to 24% of male parliamentarians. The number is far higher than the national average of women who report being sexually harassed, which is 39%.
Approximately 1% of respondents reported experience of sexual assault, but the survey did not ask them to detail their experience.
The power dynamics at play
The report explores some of the root causes of a culture of sexual harassment. More than half of those who reported sexual harassment said it was coming from someone who had a more senior position than them. Of the people who said they had been bullied, more than 75% said it came from someone more senior than them.
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Respondents also noted that they didn't believe reporting instances of harassment and abuse would result in any change, and most said it would negatively impact their career and personal life. Only 11% of people who experienced sexual harassment reported it.
'Some people described feeling that the only options were to tolerate the misconduct or leave, rather than expecting that the misconduct could be addressed," the report said.
Massive #MeToo protests in Australia this year
The report detailing the extent of the culture of sexual misconduct in Australia's parliament comes just months after thousands protested in March in another wave of the #MeToo movement.
The protests were in part sparked by Brittany Higgins, a former staffer in parliament, who revealed she had been raped in a minister's office in 2019. Then, four more women came forward to say the same man raped them as well.
Thousands March In Australia As Another #MeToo Wave Hits The Country
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Thousands March In Australia As Another #MeToo Wave Hits The Country

At around the same time, it came to light that Australian Attorney General Christian Porter was accused of raping a 16-year-old girl when he was a teenager. The victim died by suicide last year. Porter denied the allegation.
"This isn't a political problem. This is a human problem," Higgins said at the protests in March. "We've all learned over the past few weeks just how common gendered violence is in this country. It's time our leaders on both sides of politics stop avoiding the public and side-stepping accountability. It's time we actually address the problem."

 
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