What's new

Two Christians shot dead in Faisalabad, Section 144 imposed

DaRk WaVe

RETIRED TTA
Joined
Aug 17, 2009
Messages
5,239
Reaction score
0
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
Two Christians shot dead in Faisalabad, Section 144 imposed

FAISALABAD: Section 144 was imposed in Faisalabad following severe clashes between rival groups in Waris Pura area on Monday.

The clashes came as a result of the killing of two Christian brothers accused of writing a blasphemous pamphlet critical of the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) outside a court in Faisalabad.

Two people were reported to be injured as a result of the firing.

Police used Armored Personal Carrier vehicles to control the situation and resorted to aerial shelling to disperse the people.

An unidentified youth shot dead pastor Rashid Emmanuel, 32, and his brother Sajjad, and left their police escort critically wounded, as they left a court hearing, police official Amanullah Khan told AFP.

“Both brothers were rushed to hospital where they were pronounced dead,” Khan said.

Doctor Rana Bashir, chief of Allied Hospital, confirmed the deaths and said the wounded police officer was undergoing surgery.

In another development, Regional Police Officer Aftab Cheema and Commissioner Tahir Hussain have held a meeting with Bishop Joseph Cots. Both expressed their grief over the killing of two Christian brothers. They also assured the Bishop of arresting the culprits soon.

The brothers were arrested on July 2, with their supporters claiming the charges against them were trumped up.

James Aftab, a senior church official in Faisalabad said the men had been “implicated in a fake case” while Atif Jamil Pagaan, a spokesman for Pakistan Minorities Democratic Foundation, also said the men had been set up.

“The charges levied on them are false as no evidence has been brought and no witness was present,” he said, adding that the pamphlets were handwritten and photocopied, and anonymously distributed with the brothers’ contact details.

Earlier this month, about 400 demonstrators burned tyres and held protests in the low-income Waris Pura neighbourhood of Faisalabad, a slum inhabited by nearly 100,000 Christians, demanding the death penalty for the accused.

Pakistan’s blasphemy law carries the death penalty although no one has ever been sent to the gallows for the crime.

Human rights activists want the legislation repealed, saying it is exploited for personal enmity.

Two Christians shot dead in Faisalabad, Section 144 imposed – The Express Tribune
 
.
Pakistan needs to initiate tolerance building measures, teach some courses or something! Man oh man what a rallying point for communal butchering.
 
.
I did not post the news of the case since people have accused me of being anti-Islamic and focusing too much on the negative side. However, when this news popped up into my news feed, it send shivers down my spine since it was the realization of a fear that our society has become a society of monsters.

Here is the timeline:-

July 2, 2010 : Police arrest Pastor Rashid Emanuel and his brother Sajid Emanuel in an alleged blasphemy case

July 11, 2010 : Locals stage demonstrations and torch some houses of Christians. Mosques spread messages condemning the alleged blasphemy and allegedly called for violence through their loudspeakers.

July 19, 2010 : Police produce the witnesses before court to get an extended judicial remand. Since evidence was lacking, militant extremists fearing the acquittal of the brothers shot them dead outside the district courts alongwith a police officer.



Two Christians shot dead in Faisalabad, Section 144 imposed
By Express / AFP

July 19, 2010

christian-killed-608.jpg

An unidentified youth shot dead pastor Rashid Emmanuel, 32, and his brother Sajjad, and left their police escort critically wounded, as they left a court hearing in Faisalabad city. — File Photo

The brothers were arrested on July 2, with their supporters claiming the charges against them were trumped up.

FAISALABAD: Section 144 was imposed in Faisalabad following severe clashes between rival groups in Waris Pura area on Monday.

The clashes came as a result of the killing of two Christian brothers accused of writing a blasphemous pamphlet critical of the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) outside a court in Faisalabad.

Two people were reported to be injured as a result of the firing.

Police used Armored Personal Carrier vehicles to control the situation and resorted to aerial shelling to disperse the people.

An unidentified youth shot dead pastor Rashid Emmanuel, 32, and his brother Sajjad, and left their police escort critically wounded, as they left a court hearing, police official Amanullah Khan told AFP.

“Both brothers were rushed to hospital where they were pronounced dead,” Khan said.

Doctor Rana Bashir, chief of Allied Hospital, confirmed the deaths and said the wounded police officer was undergoing surgery.

In another development, Regional Police Officer Aftab Cheema and Commissioner Tahir Hussain have held a meeting with Bishop Joseph Cots. Both expressed their grief over the killing of two Christian brothers. They also assured the Bishop of arresting the culprits soon.

The brothers were arrested on July 2, with their supporters claiming the charges against them were trumped up.

James Aftab, a senior church official in Faisalabad said the men had been “implicated in a fake case” while Atif Jamil Pagaan, a spokesman for Pakistan Minorities Democratic Foundation, also said the men had been set up.

“The charges levied on them are false as no evidence has been brought and no witness was present,” he said, adding that the pamphlets were handwritten and photocopied, and anonymously distributed with the brothers’ contact details.

Earlier this month, about 400 demonstrators burned tyres and held protests in the low-income Waris Pura neighbourhood of Faisalabad, a slum inhabited by nearly 100,000 Christians, demanding the death penalty for the accused.

Pakistan’s blasphemy law carries the death penalty although no one has ever been sent to the gallows for the crime.

Human rights activists want the legislation repealed, saying it is exploited for personal enmity.
 
.
Well damn looks like the Christians are living the life in Pakistan! Jesus Christ have mercy on them if their own brown countrymen don't..
What happend was wrong.....But don't generalize it....No one supports killing of innocents.
And BTW putting teh word "BROWN country men" was necessary???
 
.
As I sign up to news feeds of various human rights and minority rights groups, I had been flooded with news of the issue.

Here's Asian Human Rights Commission's earlier report on the issue:-


PAKISTAN: The Christian community in Punjab is under threat from extremist groups again; two brothers are illegally charged with blasphemy

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION – URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME

Urgent Appeal Case: AHRC-UAC-102-2010

14 July 2010
------------------------------------------------------
PAKISTAN: The Christian community in Punjab is under threat from extremist groups again; two brothers are illegally charged with blasphemy

ISSUE: Religious minorities; blasphemy law; threats; arbitrary detention
------------------------------------------------------

Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has learned that two Christian men are in imminent danger after they were arrested, without a legitimate investigation, for blasphemy. The police officers involved have not followed the penal code, which only allows such charges to be made after an investigation by the superintendent of police. Blasphemy can still be met with the death penalty in Pakistan.

Violent rallies by radical Muslims in the area have called for the men's deaths, and Christians have reportedly begun to leave the neighbourhood. They fear that a new attack is planned for the end of the month, around the anniversary of a deadly attack on Christians 50km away in Korian village, Tehsil Gojra; six were set alight and burned to death. Mosque loudspeakers are also being freely used to incite the violence, which is illegal.

Immediate action must be taken to remove the men from danger, take up their case according to the laws and procedures of the country, and quell the rising tide of violence against the Christian community.

CASE NARRATIVE:

Mr. Rashid Emmanuel, 32, is a pastor. On the evening of 2 July he received a telephone call from a man who claimed to be from the La Salle School, a prominent Christian educational centre. He asked to meet Mr. Rashid about an urgent matter at Zilla Council chowk (crossroads) in Faisalabad. When Rashid arrived later that evening he saw four persons standing in the dark; before ten uniformed police officers reportedly emerged and arrested him.

He was taken to the Civil Lines Police Station nearby and shown a photocopy of a four-page handwritten pamphlet that criticized Islam and its last prophet, Muhammad (peace be upon him). The pamphlet appeared to be signed by Rashid and his younger brother Sajid Emmanuel, and instructed the reader to contact them for further information. It featured their cell phone numbers and national identity card numbers.

The police detained Rashid and released a boy who they had mistakenly thought to be Rashid's brother. The blasphemy complaint was filed by Mr. Mohammad Khurram Shehzad, a printer who reportedly declared that his assistant had seen a man distributing the pamphlets at Lari Adda, the city’s main bus terminus, on 1 July. Based on this information the police filed a First Information Report (FIR), a legal document for case proceeding in the court). You can read it here.

However the blasphemy law was amended in 2004 specifically to avoid its abuse via baseless charges. As details below the blasphemy charge can still be met with the death penalty, yet it often arises amid neighbourhood vendettas. Section 295C of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPP) now states that no case of blasphemy can be filed without the investigation of the superintendent of police.

A representative of the Christian community – Mr. Atif Jamil Pagan, the Chief of Pakistan Minorities Democratic Harmony Foundation – contacted the police and was told by the SHO that a sub inspector and an assistant superintendent had been chosen for the investigation; he allegedly acknowledged that they were not complying with section 295C of the PPC because they were under pressure from extremist Muslim groups in the community. The sub inspector, a Mr. Mohammad Hessian, later told Atif that the accused was being detained without evidence against him because the case was a sensitive one.

On 3 July we are told that the police took Rashid to the Anti Terrorist Court (ATC) for police remand, where the case was correctly refused. Religious matters are no longer under the authority of the ATC, as maintained in clause 780 of the Anti Terrorist Act (ATA) 1997. Rashid was taken to a duty magistrate in the Civil Lines jurisdiction, who agreed to his two-day remand in police custody, despite the breach of procedure.


We are told that during this time the sub inspector summoned Atif Pagan to the police station and asked that he produce Rashid’s young brother. For his protection, Pagan arranged for Sajid to be handed to the police in the presence of Bishop Joseph Couetts of Faisalabad. The police then asked the brothers to handwrite each pamphlets three times. On 7 July the writing samples were sent to experts in Lahore, around 200km from Faisalabad, but the experts reportedly replied that they could not work from the photocopied pamphlets.

During this time groups of organized Muslim activists started to rally against the brothers in public: we are told that the loudspeakers from a number of mosques were used illegally to do so, and to incite violence against local Christians (in breach, as noted below, of Section 3 of the Loud Speaker Act 1965). On 7 July a procession in Warispura saw local Muslim residents chanting threatening slogans against Christians; one chant called for the hanging of Rashid and Sajid, and we are informed that the mob attacked a Catholic Church, breaking its windows and doors. On 10 July persons in another procession burnt tires on the streets; a call went up declaring that Christians would not be allowed to live in Warispura. At 1am that night a procession of motorbikes took place, with riders allegedly harassing Christians who were leaving their homes with their belongings. The protestors announced that a meeting would be held at Ghanta Chowk on 11 July, a central gathering place for such rallies.

We are told that the police began efforts to address the protestors on the evening of 10 July, and that after a number of meetings it was agreed that the rallies and threats should stop.

However protest gatherings continued on 11 July, and united into a large meeting at noon, at which Muslim leaders from various religious political parties, among them Khatme-e-Nabowat, Jamiat Ulema-ePakistan and Namoos-e-Risalat reportedly reiterated death threats against the brothers, because the government had not sentenced them to death. We are told that among the speakers were Sahibzada Abulkhair Mahumed Zubair and Syed Hidayat Hussain Shah, who are known for inciting violence in the area. At the meeting it was announced that a set of gallows had been set up at the tower of Ghanta Ghar (in the centre of Faisalabad), in preparation for the hanging of blasphemous Christians.

We are told that the brothers remain in detention at the police station without adequate protection against mob violence. There are strong fears that they could be attacked. The men have reported that co-detainees are also threatening them. Immediate action must be taken to remove them from danger, provide strong state protection, take up their case according to the laws and procedures of the country, and quell the rising tide of violence against the Christian community.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

Almost a year ago six Christians, two of them women, were set alight and burned to death under similar circumstances just 50km away in Korian village, Tehsil Gojra, as reported in urgent appeal: A human rights activist faces terrorism charges for publicising the murder of Christians, while the mullahs who encouraged the violence remain free and mentioned again in: Newspaper advertisements call for the murder of a human rights lawyer in Punjab; police silently spectate. Houses were also set on fire. The Christian community in Wasapura is extremely concerned that a similar attack could be planned around the anniversary of the Gojra violence, on 31 July. With such incidents already proven to be possible, it is imperative that these concerns are acted on, and the greatest efforts are taken by the administration to protect these Pakistanis from potential attack, and reassure them of their security and their rights.

Religious minority groups in Pakistan remain vulnerable due to the continued use and abuse of blasphemy charges, despite section 295C of the PPC. This must be strongly implemented if minorities are to be protected. Police who fail to follow the code and who operate under the directive of extremists in the community must face strong legal action. Charges of blasphemy are still met with the death penalty in Pakistan, and desecrating the Quran carries a life sentence.

The AHRC is also aware of several recent cases in which mosques have used loud speakers to provoke anger against religious minorities. Section 3 of Loud Speaker Act 1965 bans all types of speeches other than Azan (the call to prayer) and the Friday sermon in Arabic. Charges must be taken against those who allow the mosques to be used illegally to incite violence.

Here is one of the most comprehensive of earlier reports:-

Brothers face the death penalty

By Dan Wooding
Founder of ASSIST Ministries

FAISALABAD, PAKISTAN (ANS) -- Muslims in the Pakistani city of Faisalabad are threatening to torch the houses of Christians after the arrest of two Christian brothers over alleged blasphemy churches in the first week of July, ANS has learned.

The Christian men were residing in house no. P-230, Street no 5, Mohalla Daudnagar, Faisalabad, before they were accused of blasphemy.

Mr. Walter Naveed of Human Rights Focus Pakistan told ANS that Rashid Emmanuel, 32 and Sajid Masih, 30, had been running “United Ministries Pakistan” for the last two years in Daudnagar near the Warispura Christian colony of Faisalabad.

He said the pair was accused by Khurram Shahzad, a Muslim man, of pasting allegedly blasphemous posters in a truck station in Faisalabad.

“The arrests have provoked Muslims to take out agitation rallies across Faisalabad,” Naveed told ANS.

He explained how they had been set up.

“They (Rashid Emmanuel and Sajid Masih) received a phone call a week ago. The caller told them that he would like to meet them in connection with their ministry’s website,” said Naveed.

When Rashid went to meet the caller at the nearby railway station, the appointed venue of the meeting, the police were already there waiting for him.

Mr. Naveed said that the police took Rashid to police station and he was later charged with committing blasphemy against the prophet Muhammad.

"When Sajid, Rashid’s brother, went to tell the police that his brother was innocent, he too was arrested by the police."

The two Christian men now could face the death penalty.

295-C of Pakistan Penal Code reads: “Use of derogatory remarks, etc; in respect of the Holy Prophet. Whoever by words, either spoken or written or by visible representation, or by any imputation, innuendo, or insinuation, directly or indirectly, defiles the sacred name of the Holy Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) shall be punished with death, or imprisonment for life, and shall also be liable to fine.”

Naveed disclosed that Khurram Shahzad had lodged a police First Information Report (FIR) against Rashid Emmanuel and Sajid Masih and quoted him as stating stating that he read many posters containing “blasphemous content” in the Faisalabad Lorry Station and that details of the United Ministries Pakistan were present on the posters.

Naveed said that Khurram Shahzad stated in the FIR that he took the poster to the owner of the steel factory where he worked and quotes the complainant as stating in the FIR that the factory owner’s eyes "welled with tears" as he read the poster so he accompanied with Khurram Shahzad to the police station.

Rashid Emmanuel and Sajid’s family members have fled to safety, fearing more trouble, said Naveed.

He described the situation in Warispura Christian colony in Faisalabad as “tense” and that the Christians there are hoping not to face a “Gojra-like situation.”

Gojra, a small town in province Punjab of Pakistan exploded into international limelight last year when seven Christians were burned alive by angry Muslims over rumors that Christians had committed blasphemy.

Naveed said that the Christians of Warispura, a large Christian colony in Faisalabad, are feeling “highly insecure” after Muslims have held a string of rallies over the past week.

The local human rights activist said that a large number of enraged Muslims attended a rally in Warispura on July 12, 2010, and among those there were students of nearby Madrassas (religious schools).

Mr. Naveed said that agitation rallies were taken out across Faisalabad city on July 13, 2010. He said these rallies headed towards Ghantaghar and Railway Road Faisalabad.

He quoted one of his friends, who had heard on Friday, July 16, 2010 mosque announcements provoking Muslims to protest at a rally and also to “burn the houses of Christians.”

Neveed said that Muslims could not succeed in setting Christians’ houses on fire on Friday, July 16, 2010 but did not rule out this possibility in the days to come “as the situation on the ground stands tense and uncertain”.

He said that Rashid and Sajid were imprisoned in district Jail Faisalabad.

Asked if the two Christian men could be attacked in prison, he referred to "extra judicial killings of Christians in police custody" in past and said that an attempt to kill the two men in prison "could not be ruled out."

According to media reports, the Christians of Daud Nagar, Warispura, Barkatpura, Bilal Town, Ibne Marriam and Jhandapir in Faisalabad are living under constant fear as a result of processions taken out by extremist Muslim organizations.


Read the posts by Pakistan Christian Post regarding the issue when the case was filed:-

Pakistan Christian Post
 
.
What happend was wrong.....But don't generalize it....No one supports killing of innocents.
And BTW putting teh word "BROWN country men" was necessary"

I'm not generalizing it, Christians are being butchered in Pakistan. Let's not de-value the gravity of the situation with the generalization argument! No one is generalizing nor do we condone killings but it's happening and in huge numbers according to all the human rights statistics I just googled. I personally am in shock.
 
.
Whats happening to the people. Why in this land of Sufism, so much intolerance is everywhere. Who is behind it everybody knows but only few courageos could point it and very few in public( like Nadeem Pracha).

When there will be a demonstration for Peace, People will come out say Stop it, Our country is for all, everybody is our brother.
 
.
I'm not generalizing it, Christians are being butchered in Pakistan. Let's not de-value the gravity of the situation with the generalization argument! No one is generalizing nor do we condone killings but it's happening and in huge numbers according to all the human rights statistics I just googled. I personally am in shock.
How many huge.....Muslims are also being butchered by same radical elements and in much more numbers. But just making the news like "Ohh see how bad things are happening with Christians in Pakistan" is just to serve purpose of defaming.....

I wont consider them as two Christian being butchered but two Pakistanis regardless of religion.

You still didn't answer ......Was putting teh word "brown contry men" was necessary.
 
Last edited:
.
That's sad news. I hope the deceased rest in peace and this becomes a lesson to learn from for everyone.
 
.
First of all RIP.

I would like to comment that it is common for thugs (usually extremist groups) to blame minorities of blasphemy in Pakistan by producing fake documents or hearsay against them.

And our great blasphemy laws help them achieve this very easily without any problems.
 
.
First of all RIP.

I would like to comment that it is common for thugs (usually extremist groups) to blame minorities of blasphemy in Pakistan by producing fake documents or hearsay against them.

And our great blasphemy laws help them achieve this very easily without any problems.

Why general public is not coming out and lashing blasphemy laws ?
Why media specially Urdu Media not writing about in front page?
Why supreme court is not acting ?
Why there is not a big statement from Politician?

What they fear about ?
 
. . . .
Why general public is not coming out and lashing blasphemy laws ?

Because Sipah e Sahaba, Lashkar e Jhangvi and other militant groups will kill them.

Tolerant Pakistanis have been hostage to militants in fear and I am guilty of it as well.

Why media specially Urdu Media not writing about in front page?

Their readers don't want to read it. They want to read about the French burqa ban and Blackwater stories from Farid Paracha and Munawar Hasan.

Why supreme court is not acting ?

Buah. It's busy catching politicians.

Why there is not a big statement from Politician?
What they fear about ?

They don't want to get killed or loose their vote bank.

You speak for minority rights in Jhang --> you will get no votes.
 
.

Latest posts

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom