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Pakistan will write to Pope, Interpol on desecration

Dance

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ISLAMABAD: The government told the Senate on Monday it would write to the Pope and Interpol for action against an American pastor over the burning of the holy Quran before the upper house unanimously passed a resolution calling upon the United States to bring the controversial preacher to justice.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik informed the house after a fiery debate at the start of a new session that he was addressing the letters to Pope Benedict XVI and Interpol Secretary-General Ronald Nobel on the directive of President Asif Ali Zardari, who had himself called for UN action over the March 21 incident in his address to a joint sitting of parliament on March 22.

The letter to the Interpol chief, he said, would demand that international police treat the matter as case of “criminal violence” and take measures to guard against any future desecration or blasphemy.

The Senate resolution, which Leader of the House Nayyar Hussain Bokhari said was agreed to by all parliamentary groups, strongly condemned the incident and called upon the United States to take legal action against pastor Terry Jones, who oversaw the burning of the Quran at a church in Florida.

It also urged all Muslim countries to convey their outrage to the United States and asked the United Nations to take notice of what it called “heinous act”.

Some two dozen senators from all parties spoke on the issue, some of them calling for a proactive role by Pakistan like proposing a special summit of the Organisation of Islamic Conference, and some others, particularly those from religious parties, holding the US government responsible for allowing this act to take place.

Half-hearted silence for Bhatti

Before the furious debate, in which most senators seemed keen to excel one another in condemning the desecration of the holy Quran, it was with some apparent half-heartedness that the house observed a minute’s silence to mourn the March 2 assassination of then minorities affairs minister Shahbaz Bhatti.

A mood of hesitation from the chair to both the treasury and opposition benches descended on the house after ruling PPP’s Senator Khatu Mal Jeewan proposed that session start with a minute’s silence for Mr Bhatti, a Christian, who was shot dead by unknown gunmen near his mother’s home in Islamabad, apparently for his views against the alleged misuse of a blasphemy law against the members of the country’s non-Muslim minority communities.

A controversial remark from a young religious enthusiast and senator from the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, Hafiz Rashid Ahmed, who said such a gesture would be “against the Sharia” seemed to put all sides in a quandary on whether to support or oppose the proposal.

House Chairman Farooq H. Naek, instead of taking a decision, asked for advice from opposition leader Wasim Sajjad of the PML-Q, who, in turn, seemed to ignore the issue and suggested that the house start its first private members’ day with points of order.

On a second query, Mr Sajjad again deflected from the issue and pressed that the house take up private bills on agenda despite the absence of Law and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Babar Awan and other ministers because of a cabinet meeting that was in progress at the time.

The leader of the house, being alone on the treasury benches in the absence of the ministers, also did not seem keen to press Mr Jeewan’s proposal, though finally he did endorse it, upon which the chair ordered a minute’s silence.

Nobody questioned the Fata senator’s view except Senator Abdul Rahim Mandokhel of the Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party who, while speaking on the burning of the Quran, regretted the silence of his colleagues over this outburst.

Before the house was adjourned until 10am on Tuesday, Inter-Provincial Coordination Minister Raza Rabbani, who also chairs a parliamentary commission on the implementation of the Eighteenth Amendment, said the cabinet meeting on the day had approved transfer of five federal ministries to provinces in the second phase of devolution and assured it that the process would be completed by the due date of June 30.

Pakistan will write to Pope, Interpol on desecration | Newspaper | DAWN.COM
 
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What about mob killed 2 people and burned church. USA should drone attach on them?
 
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hmm..Not every country is Islamic country.. GOP would do well if they understand it..
 
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there are 62 muslim countries in the worlds i think......and saudi arabia ,indonesia and others like iran or such can bring this issue up as well. this is just a drama to please the masses.
 
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The pope is the leader of the catholic church and has nothing to do with some idiot nobody pastor.

People seems to view other religions as groups rather than individuals which ignores how there are many different sects within a certain religion.
 
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Mouzlum Pakistanines are ourtraged, outraged I say!! not outraged enough to do anything about Wahabi/Salafi inspired Islamicans killing on average 20 Pakistanines a day -- but where a good for nothing Fauj cannot help, maybe the Pope can - - maybe corrupt, hopeless, helpless and degenerate Islam needs the Pope, after all, it cannot depend on Pakistines and it's mercenary army.:cheers:
 
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Sir there is a slight mistake on your part.

"maybe corrupt, hopeless, helpless and degenerate Islam (should be Muslims instead not Islam blame muslims) needs the Pope"
 
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I actually think it is correct to raise such an issue on the international stage. It would have been better if the OIC did so, but nevertheless, this hypocrisy needs to be highlighted.

Such idiotic holy men should be humiliated internationally.
 
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Lutfwaffe:


Either Religion is what it's adherents practice or it is not religion -- make up your mind --- Harsh? Aaauh, that's cute, Muslims have no connection with Islam, really? - get real guy, get the thumb out of the behind and think.
 
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Harsh not at all, Don't blame the system blame those who don't rightly follow it for example yourself big talk and no actions, In simplest terms stop maligning Islam as a pervert religion as you mentioned Above try to use decent language haven't seen that from you for other system of beliefs despite their ill sick actions against muslims, that makes you a biased person, the perverts are on the opposite sides as well that is why pope is being or will be contacted whether it works out or not.

You can open another thread for thumbs and behind.
 
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Your" sentiments'" I could careless about, like the rest of the non-thinking Islamcians dung heaps, your particular brand of Political correctness belongs where it originated, in the dung heap.

Please don't misunderstand me, just like communists and communism have a direct relationship, so Muslims and Islam have a direct relationship -- If today Islam is murderous, hopeless, helpless and devoid of substance, we may recall that once Islam was once about FAITH in God, the representative of learning, of the quest for knowledge, of sincerity, of honesty, of humility -- so instead of playing Saudi, you may want to think, and ask what has changed??? Why did it change, who changed it?
 
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:what: stupid people stupid move .

these haramkhor parliamentarians who do not qualify basics of Islam have NO right to represent 16 crore Pakistanis for their stupid misadventures
 
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:what: stupid people stupid move .

these haramkhor parliamentarians who do not qualify basics of Islam have NO right to represent 16 crore Pakistanis for their stupid misadventures

perhaps the MPs do this as a vote winner move for them in elections. The loudest they shout, the most of the vote they will get.
 
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