Pakistan Bans Rallies Commemorating Salman Taseer’s Murderer
ICC Note:
Pakistan’s government has said it would bar Islamist organizations from staging rallies commemorating Mumtaz Qadri, an assassin executed by the government last year. Qadri was convicted of killing Salman Taseer in 2011 after Taseer, the then governor of Punjab, took a stand against Pakistan’s notorious blasphemy laws. Taseer also stood up for Asia Bibi, a Christian woman accused of blasphemy, which made some hardliners in the country claim he was standing against Islam.
03/01/2017 Pakistan (The Wire) – Pakistan said on Tuesday it would bar Islamist organizations from staging rallies commemorating a killer whom many religious groups consider a hero for assassinating a prominent politician who had called for the reform of blasphemy laws.
Mumtaz Qadri was executed on February 29 last year for murdering Punjab governor Salman Taseer, whom he served as a bodyguard before killing him in the capital Islamabad in 2011.
Taseer had enraged religious hardliners by calling for the reform of blasphemy laws that mandate the death penalty for insulting Islam.
The blasphemy law and Taseer’s murder have exposed the growing gap between hard-line religious conservatives and liberals in Pakistan.
Members of Tehreek-i-Labaik Ya Rasool Allah, a coalition of Islamist groups which planned to stage a rally on Wednesday to honor Qadri, said two of its leaders had been placed under house arrest ahead of the one-year anniversary of Qadri’s death.
The coalition has in the past led vast street protests against Qadri’s execution and this week it planned to stage a march from the eastern city of Lahore to a shrine built over Qadri’s grave on the outskirts of Islamabad.
“All types of protests or rallies are strictly prohibited right now, especially in this kind of security environment,” said Punjab government spokesman Malik Ahmad Khan, referring to a spate of Islamist attacks in Pakistan this month.
More than 130 people have been killed in recent weeks by militant groups after the Pakistani Taliban and ISIS carried out bomb attacks across the country.
More than 100 people are charged with blasphemy and jailed each year in predominantly Muslim Pakistan, many of them Christians and other minorities. Critics say the law is often invoked in cases of personal disputes.
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