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It isn't the same thing. Some laws are important to enforce and some aren't. Attorney Generals subject to election can make the difference between someone rich and powerful who can bribe his way out of a trial and prosecuting someone poor beggar who needs a dollar just to survive.I specifically used the words powerful and resourceful to indicate the rich and corrupt. The laws should be made and implemented as such that no one should think of violating them, regardless of their social status or background...Pakistan does have a constitutional position for an attorney General
My understanding is that the Army and ISI can intervene in civilian trials as they please.- and I do not understand how the Army fits into the topic at hand ,so I will not say much on that.
That doesn't sound like much accountability to me, nor does it to Pakistan's own Prime Ministers: note that one of the Wikileaks cables actually quotes a former PM as claiming that the U.S. appoints the Army Chief!...the Chief of the Army Staff is Appointed by the Prime Minister, and since the COAS represents the entire army,theoretically that puts the Army under the civilian oversight.
Which gives the Army a big incentive to fight against there ever being a truly competent civilian government, wouldn't you say?- the Army intervenes because there is a vacuum left by the civilian governments due to their inapt governance, and someone has to fill that vacuum. The day we have a sincere, credible and a strong headed government, the Army will have no choice but to retreat.
Your comment is silly but I will answer it in the hopes that you are genuinely interested to know the answer...
Allah's law is to be implemented by mankind... Allah did not say that He himself will come and sort out the enemies alone rather he ordered Muslims to engage in Jihad when the enemy attacks... Think before you post stupid comments...
You know, the more I review this the less extraordinary Taseer's murder appears. Because charges of blasphemy rarely reach Pakistani courts since the accused is killed first in jail or in mysterious circumstances, probably with the consent of the security forces. Taseer's death is in keeping, then, with Pakistani tradition, isn't it?
what are you basing your assumption on exactly?
So while abolishing the Black Law, or replacing it with a more moderate Western-fashion hate crimes-type law, may be symbolically useful and emotionally satisfying, doing so will hardly be effective unless vigilantism and police misbehavior are also addressed. Preferably it should all be done simultaneously.
Probably salman Taseers sons dont love him to and extent as Qadri loves OUR PROPHET (P.B.U.H). Why Salman Taseer didnot went by the court , Why he wanted a presidential pardon to a proven convict of insulting our prophet(p.b.u.h).Yeah you are "right". I don't know why Salman Taseer sons have not taken action themselves after watching their bullet ridden father. Why do you think they have allowed the court to do justice?
PS. DON'T JUSTIFY A MURDER.
These are all connected, and the military is tied in, too. The police and security forces are empowered by the extrajudicial power bestowed upon them by the accepted operation of the blasphemy law, the military and ISI interfere with the judicial system (that they themselves aren't even subject to!), and justice for the little guy is denied because the rich can bribe their way out of jams since the prosecutors aren't accountable to the people.Not a black law second it will not be replaced
all we need to do is to address the problems we face in police and judiciary