Tag Archives: Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf

Pakistani mobs use blasphemy as excuse to persecute, say Christians

By Sib Kaifee

In Pakistan, the mere accusation of blasphemy is enough to spur angry mobs to violence, and human rights advocates say the victims are usually Christians.

Last weekend, some 3,000 Muslims stormed Christian churches, torched hundreds of buildings and burned hundreds of Bibles in a Christian neighborhood of Lahore, the country’s second largest city.It apparently began as an argument between two men, but once the accusation of blasphemy was invoked, it exploded into violence and mayhem.

“The attackers were given a free hand when they were torching the belongings and our homes,” a witness told FoxNews.com on condition of anonymity. “The attackers were Pashtuns and workers of different steel factories and warehouses.”

The violence came two days after Sawan Masih, a Christian sanitation worker, and Shahid Imran, a Muslim barber, fought.When Imran accused Masih of blasphemy, police and a local mosque got involved and the situation spiraled out of control. Remarkably, no one was killed.

In Pakistan, where Christians make up about 3 percent of the population of 180 million, a blasphemy conviction can bring a sentence of life in prison or even death. And some Pakistani leaders have urged the Islamic nation’s courts to ban the Christian Bible altogether, arguing that by its very nature it blasphemes Islam’s Prophet Muhammad. Although the nation has so far not taken that step, the sentiment provides cover for vigilante attacks on minorities, according to Christians.

Salamat Akhtar, founding chairman of the All Pakistan Christians League, told FoxNews.com it was the mob that committed blasphemy in the latest case, by burning two churches and destroying the Bibles.

“We request the government to register the same blasphemy case against the perpetrators,” said Akhtar.

Nearly 200 houses were burned in the Christian neighborhood, called, Joseph Colony. The destruction has left about 300 poor Christian families homeless and wondering why police, instead of providing protection, told them to evacuate ahead of the mob backlash.

A senior police official from Lahore told FoxNews.com that the Christian residential colony comprises a quarter of an otherwise industrial area, and noted the factory owners have long been trying to dislodge them to they could expand their operations.

After hundreds of Christians took to the streets to protest the day after the violence, Pakistan‘s high court criticized local police. A hearing has been set for Wednesday, but Asif Aqeel, director of Center for Law and Justice, said the courts were not likely to be able to do much.

“Judicial inquiries into such incidents mostly remain useless as the administration influenced by [the] powerful government does not provide facts and dodges the judges,” Aqeel said.

Though Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf both have ordered an investigation into the attack and condemned it, Christian activists are skeptical.

“The government, courts and institutions are not serious about our plight and, after so many incidents, our confidence level is decreasing,” Naila Diyal, chairperson of Christian Progressive Movement, told FoxNews.com.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pakistan orders operation after deadly bombing

Pakistan‘s prime minister has ordered on operation in the southwestern city of Quetta following a bombing targeting minority Shiite Muslims that killed 89 people.

A statement issued by Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf‘s office on Tuesday provided no details about the operation or exactly who would be targeted.

It simply says that the operation aims to eliminate “those responsible for playing with lives of innocent civilians.”

Meanwhile, thousands of Shiites protested for a third day in Quetta, demanding the army take control of the city and launch a targeted operation against sectarian militant groups like Lashkar-e-Jhangvi.

The group claimed responsibility for the bombing Saturday that killed 89 people and one in January that killed 86.

Radical Sunni militants have targeted Shiites because they don’t consider them to be real Muslims.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pakistani officer probing PM graft charge dies

Pakistani police say an officer who was investigating a corruption case against the prime minister has been found dead in the country’s capital.

Senior police officer Bani Yamin says the body of Kamran Faisal was found hanging from a ceiling fan in his room at a government dorm in Islamabad on Friday.

Yamin says police are investigating whether Faisal committed suicide.

Faisal’s death came days after the Supreme Court ordered the arrest of Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf and 15 others in connection with an old corruption case the officer was investigating.

The prime minister was implicated in the case when he was minister of water and power. At the time, he oversaw the import of short-term power stations that cost the government millions of dollars but produced little energy.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pakistan Official: I Refuse to Arrest PM

Pakistan’s anti-corruption chief refused a Supreme Court order to arrest Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf in a graft case today, citing a lack of evidence in the latest clash between the government and the country’s top court. Fasih Bokhari, chief of the National Accountability Bureau, told the Supreme Court during…
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Government official refuses court order to arrest Pakistan prime minister

The head of the Pakistani government’s anti-corruption wing has refused an order by the country’s top court to arrest the prime minister in a graft case.

Fasih Bokhari, chief of the National Accountability Bureau, told the Supreme Court on Thursday that he does not have sufficient evidence to arrest Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf.

The court ordered Bokhari on Tuesday to arrest Ashraf and 15 others accused of corruption in a case involving private power stations built to provide electricity to energy-starved Pakistan.

The accusations against the prime minister, which he has denied, stem from his time as the minister for water and power.

The court ordered Bokhari on Thursday to bring the case files back to the judges so they can determine whether there is incriminating evidence.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Official refuses court order to arrest Pakistan PM

The head of the Pakistani government’s anti-corruption wing has refused an order by the country’s top court to arrest the prime minister in a graft case.

Fasih Bokhari, chief of the National Accountability Bureau, told the Supreme Court on Thursday that he does not have sufficient evidence to arrest Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf.

The court ordered Bokhari on Tuesday to arrest Ashraf and 15 others accused of corruption in a case involving private power stations built to provide electricity to energy-starved Pakistan.

The accusations against the prime minister, which he has denied, stem from his time as the minister for water and power.

The court ordered Bokhari on Thursday to bring the case files back to the judges so they can determine whether there is incriminating evidence.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Pakistani soldier dies in latest attack in Kashmir

Pakistan on Wednesday blamed Indian troops for killing one of its soldiers along the disputed Kashmir border, the latest in a series of tit-for-tat attacks that threaten to ratchet up tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.

In New Delhi, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said Tuesday that his country’s relations with archrival Pakistan “cannot be business as usual.” In Islamabad, the Pakistan military claimed Indian troops fired at a Pakistani army post across the so-called Line of Control that divides the Himalayan region.

Two other Pakistani soldiers and two Indian soldiers have died during the past 10 days in the worst bout of fighting in the region in nearly 10 years. India said one of its soldiers was beheaded.

“What has happened is unacceptable,” Singh said of the killing of the Indians, according to media reports. He made the brief comments to reporters at a New Delhi gathering for India‘s annual day honoring the military.

The Pakistani army said the shooting from Indian troops, which started at 10 p.m. Tuesday and lasted for an hour, was unprovoked and occurred in the Hot Spring and Jandot sectors of Pakistan-held Kashmir. The soldier who was killed was identified as Naik Ashraf. The army said he is survived by his wife and three daughters.

Col. R.K. Palta, an Indian army spokesman, said Wednesday that Pakistani troops fired at two Indian positions using small arms and mortar on Tuesday night in the Poonch sector of the Indian portion of Kashmir. “Our troops didn’t fire at all,” Palta said.

India and Pakistan have been rivals for decades, though ties had been improving markedly in recent years. The two have fought three wars since they were carved out of British India in 1947 — two of them over Kashmir. The region is divided between the two countries, but each claims it in its entirety.

Senior Pakistani and Indian officials so far have kept tension from the recent events from spiraling out of control. They are trying to limit the potential damage to relations, which have slowly warmed since Pakistani militants killed 166 people in the Indian coastal city of Mumbai. They suspended peace talks after the Mumbai attack, but both countries have economic and other reasons for wanting better ties.

Still, the clashes along the Kashmir border highlight how easily simmering tension can flare into conflict. The biggest risk remains an attack by militants like the one in Mumbai that would likely scuttle the reconciliation process once again.

The fighting also comes amid increasing political turmoil in Islamabad, with Pakistan‘s top court ordering the arrest of the country’s prime minister in a corruption case, officials said, and a firebrand cleric rallying thousands of people in the capital against the government.

On Monday, Indian army chief Gen. Bikram Singh accused Pakistan of planning the attacks that left the two Indian soldiers dead — making clear he felt it was not an unintentional skirmish — and warned of possible retaliation.

“The attack on Jan. 8 was premeditated, a pre-planned activity. Such an operation requires planning, detailed reconnaissance,” Singh told reporters. He said India reserved the right to retaliate at a “time and place of its choice.”

Singh urged his troops to be “aggressive and offensive in the face of provocation and fire” from Pakistan. He said the alleged beheading of the Indian soldier was “unacceptable and unpardonable” and accused Pakistan of violating the “ethics of warfare.”

The Kashmir fighting began Jan. 6 when Pakistan accused Indian troops of raiding an army post and killing a soldier. India denied launching the attack and said its troops had fired across the border in response to Pakistani shelling that had destroyed an Indian home.

Two days later, India said that Pakistani soldiers, taking advantage of heavy fog, crossed the de facto border and killed two Indian soldiers, beheading one. On Jan. 10, Pakistan said Indian troops had fired across the border and killed another of its soldiers. The Pakistani army said the shooting was unprovoked, while the Indian military said its troops were responding to fire from across the frontier.

Pakistan denies India‘s allegations and has suggested U.N. monitors in the region conduct an inquiry — a call that India rejected, saying it didn’t want to internationalize the issue.

Pakistan and India struck a cease-fire agreement over Kashmir in November 2003. There have been periodic violations of the cease-fire, but the incidents during the past week have been the most serious.

In Pakistan, Tuesday’s Supreme Court order was likely to inflame the already antagonistic relationship between the government and the court. The arrest order for Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf was tied to allegations that bidding on private power stations was marred by corruption. Ashraf had previously served as minister for water and power, said court officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

The arrest order could also provide ammunition for Tahir-ul-Qadri, a Muslim cleric who is leading massive Islamabad protests to press for the removal of the government, which he says is made up of corrupt politicians.

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Abbot reported from Islamabad.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Court orders arrest of Pakistani prime minister

Pakistan‘s top court ordered the arrest of the prime minister in a corruption case Tuesday, the latest clash between the government and a judiciary that has repeatedly pressured the country’s political leaders.

The ruling is sure to inflame the already antagonistic relationship between the court and the government, pushing the country toward yet another political crisis. It also could provide ammunition to Tahir-ul-Qadri, a firebrand Muslim cleric who was leading tens of thousands of people in a second day of rallies in Islamabad to press for the removal of the government, which he criticized as corrupt and indifferent to the common man.

The Supreme Court order against Prime Minister Raja Pervaiz Ashraf was related to a case involving private power stations set up to provide electricity to energy-starved Pakistan. The judges are investigating allegations that the bidding process was marred by corruption.

Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry ordered the arrest of 16 people involved in the case, including Ashraf, who previously served as minister for water and power, said the written court order.

An adviser to the prime minister, Fawad Chaudhry, said any attempt to arrest the prime minister would be unconstitutional since he enjoys immunity from prosecution while in office.

“We consider it a judicial coup, and it is part of a greater plan to derail democracy,” Chaudhry said.

The Supreme Court clashed repeatedly with the government over the last year, especially over an old corruption case against President Asif Ali Zardari in Swiss courts. Pakistan‘s top court convicted Ashraf’s predecessor, Yousuf Raza Gilani, of contempt of court for refusing to reopen the case and ousted him from office.

The judges pressured Ashraf as well, and the government finally agreed to the court’s demand to ask the Swiss to pursue the case — which Swiss authorities have said privately they have no intention of doing because Zardari enjoys immunity while in office.

It was unclear whether there was any connection between the Supreme Court‘s order and Qadri’s rally. But some speculated it was a scripted one-two blow by the chief justice and the cleric to strike at their opponents in the government.

Qadri has seized on alleged corruption by Pakistani politicians to rally support for his protest against the government. The cleric rocketed to national prominence after his return from Canada late last year, and his message has galvanized many Pakistanis who say the government has brought them only misery.

But critics fear that Qadri and his demands for election reforms may derail the country’s upcoming democratic elections, possibly at the behest of the country’s powerful military — allegations denied by the cleric.

Those concerns could intensify following a fiery speech he delivered to protesters Tuesday in which he condemned the country’s politicians as corrupt thieves and lavished praise on both the Supreme Court and the military, which has a history of toppling civilian governments in coups.

He said there are only two institutions in Pakistan that “are functioning and performing their duties to fulfill the needs of the people.”

“One is the judiciary of Pakistan, and one is the armed forces of Pakistan, and nothing else,” said Qadri.

The 61-year-old cleric spoke from inside a bulletproof vehicle parked several hundred meters (yards) from parliament, facing hundreds of police in riot gear who formed a human barrier against at least 30,000 demonstrators packed into the main avenue running through Islamabad. Many waved green and white Pakistani flags and cheered as Qadri spoke.

The determination of the marchers and organizers has thrust them into direct confrontation with the government, which has strongly opposed the rally.

The protest has been largely peaceful ever since demonstrators set off from Lahore on Sunday, but the underlying tension was evident early Tuesday morning when police and protesters clashed hours after Qadri arrived in Islamabad and addressed his supporters. Demonstrators threw rocks at a vehicle, while others held up bullet casings and an empty tear gas canister.

Qadri called on his supporters to stay in the streets until the national and provincial governments were dissolved, saying lawmakers were focused on lining their own pockets rather than addressing the problems of common citizens.

“The lawmakers are the law breakers,” said Qadri.

Many supporters have pledged to remain in Islamabad for as long as Qadri demands. They brought blankets to ward off the cold, and many slept in the street Monday night.

Qadri maintained that his movement was not anti-democratic, but he criticized the current political system as broken. Many of his recommendations to fix it, such as rooting out corruption and incompetence, seem more aspirational than grounded in specific details. He has issued numerous vague demands, such as vetting political candidates to make sure they’re honest and restructuring the system so that the common people have more opportunity to take part in politics.

His anti-government barbs have hit home with many Pakistanis. Five years after Pakistan‘s return to democracy from military rule, many are furious at the power outages, terror attacks and unemployment that continue to plague them.

“This system has rotted. It has to change,” said 29-year-old Iftikhar Ahmad, who traveled to Islamabad from the central city of Sargodha. “I am going to stay here … even if I die.”

Many protesters like Saqib Sultan, from the eastern city of Lahore, brought their families and slept on the road.

“My wife is here with me, my children are here, and I am here,” he said. Like many others, he vowed to stay until their demands are met and called this “the last chance to save Pakistan.”

One city official put the number of protesters at roughly 30,000. He did not want to be identified because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Some of Qadri’s reform proposals have sparked concern that the cleric is being used as a front for the Pakistani military to derail the upcoming vote, just as the country prepares for its first transfer of power from one civilian government to another.

Qadri has called for a military role in picking the caretaker government that will take over temporarily ahead of elections, and has said it could stay in place longer than normal to enact necessary reforms.

Qadri’s apparent rise to a national political force in a matter of weeks since his return from Canada have also raised questions about whether he’s been getting outside funding.

The government has painted Qadri as a menace to the country’s fragile democracy. Chaudhry, the prime minister’s adviser, said Qadri’s demands are a revolt against the state.

“Thirty thousand people cannot be allowed to take hostage 180 million people,” he said.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News