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  • 20
    Nov
    2012
    12:47am, EST

    Court clears Pakistani Christian girl accused in blasphemy case

    Farooq Naeem / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Pakistani security personnel shift Rimsha Masih (L), a Christian girl accused of blasphemy, to a helicopter after her release from jail in Rawalpindi on September 8, 2012. Masih was arrested on August 16 for allegedly burning pages containing verses from the Quran but she was released from a prison in Rawalpindi after a court accepted her bail application.

    By Fakhar Rehman, NBC News

    A Pakistani Christian girl who was accused of burning pages of Muslim holy texts has been cleared of blasphemy charges against her.

    Pakistan’s Islamabad High Court ordered a police report against Rimsha Masih discharged on Tuesday.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld


    Rimsha, who is believed to be 14, was arrested earlier this year on charges of blasphemy for allegedly burning Muslim holy texts.

    Later, police officials said she may have been framed by the cleric who accused her of the crime. He was later arrested.

    In Muslim Pakistan, the mere allegation of an offense to Islam can mean death. Those accused under an anti-blasphemy law are sometimes lynched by the public even if they are found innocent by the courts.

    Rimsha was held in a garrison near Islamabad for nearly three weeks before she was freed after a judge granted her bail, the Associated Press reported. A reporter on the scene said she was taken from the prison in an armored vehicle and whisked away by helicopter. Her face was covered to protect her identity.

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    29 comments

    This young Christian woman is also developmentally disabled. Her accuser should burn in hell. This case and the case of the young woman advocating education who was shot for her views will hopefully advance the cause of women's rights in Pakistan.

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  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    3:10pm, EDT

    Pakistani judge grants bail for Christian girl in blasphemy case

    Arif Ali / AFP - Getty Images file

    Pakistani Christian villagers protest the country's strict blasphemy laws in Korian on Aug. 30.

    By Reuters and NBC News staff

    A Christian girl arrested in Pakistan for defaming Islam was granted bail on Friday, a judge said, days after police detained a Muslim cleric on suspicion of planting evidence to frame her in a case that caused an international outcry.

    Rimsha Masih, believed to be 14, may be in danger if she is set free and stays in Pakistan. Her arrest last month angered religious and secular groups worldwide but protests in Pakistan attracted only a handful of supporters.

    In Muslim Pakistan, the mere allegation of causing offence to Islam can mean death. Those accused under an anti-blasphemy law are sometimes lynched by the public even if they are found innocent by the courts.

    The girl would be reunited with her family at a location that was being kept secret for security reasons, said Robinson Asghar, an aide to Minister for National Harmony Paul Bhatti.


    There were no plans to send Masih abroad, Bhatti told Reuters.

    "I am really satisfied and happy," he said. "I believe justice has prevailed."

    Masih was accused by Muslim neighbors of burning Islamic religious texts and arrested, but police recently said a cleric had been taken into custody after witnesses reported he had torn pages from a Koran and planted them in Masih's bag beside burned papers.

    One tip apparently came from a local man who claimed he saw the cleric — Imam Khalid Jadoon — mixing holy text pages with ashes, NBC reported.

     "I asked Jadoon why he was fabricating the evidence," Hafiz Zubair told a local news channel. "He said that this would ensure a strong case against the girl and would ultimately help them in evicting the Christians from the locality."

    Jadoon is now in jail, awaiting his hearing on blaspheny charges.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In Masih's impoverished village on the edge of Islamabad, some said they were disappointed that she had not been sentenced.

    "This is wrong. She burned the Koran," said resident Ijaz Sarwar near the local mosque.

    Nearby, Saddam Hussein, 18, expressed sympathies for the cleric accused of framing Masih. "If she is freed, the maulvi (cleric) should be freed as well," he said.

    Two bonds of 500,000 Pakistani Rupees each — for a total of roughly $10,000 were to be deposited Saturday — for her release. She is charged with desecrating a holy place and desecrating a holy text, NBC News reported.

    Million-strong petition
    Activists and human rights groups say vague terminology has led to the anti-blasphemy law's misuse, and that it dangerously discriminates against tiny minority groups.

    Human Rights Watch welcomed Masih's release and urged authorities to consider reforming the law.

    "This child should not have been behind bars at all. All charges against her should be dropped," the international rights group said in a statement.

    "Pakistan's criminal justice system should instead concentrate on holding her accuser accountable for inciting violence against the child and members of the local Christian community."

    More than a million people globally have signed a petition started by Masih's father for her release.

    An embattled minority: Christians in Pakistan

    But despite the international condemnation, many Pakistanis support the blasphemy law.

    Last year, Punjab province governor Salman Taseer was shot dead by his bodyguard for suggesting the law be reformed. Lawyers hailed Taseer's killer as a hero, tossing rose petals at him after he was arrested.

    Taseer had been defending a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, who was jailed on blasphemy charges. She is still in jail on death row.

    Two months after Taseer's murder, Minister for Minorities Shahbaz Bhatti, a Christian, was killed by the Taliban for demanding changes to the law.

    Critics of Pakistan's leaders say they are too worried about an extremist backlash to speak out against the law in a nation where religious conservatism is increasingly prevalent.

    Christians, who make up four percent of Pakistan's population of 180 million, have been especially concerned about the blasphemy law, saying it offers them no protection.

    Convictions hinge on witness testimony and are often linked to vendettas, they complain.

    In 2009, 40 houses and a church were set ablaze by a mob of 1,000 Muslims in the town of Gojra, in Punjab province. At least seven Christians were burnt to death. The attacks were triggered by reports of the desecration of the Koran.

    Two Christian brothers accused of writing a blasphemous letter against the Prophet Mohammad were gunned down outside a court in the eastern city of Faisalabad in July of 2010.

    NBC News' Amna Nawaz contributed to this report.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    153 comments

    I try to be sensitive kind and non-judgmental of the beliefs of others...but these people are insane. If their god can't stand up to a little controversy, he's a very poor god.

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  • 2
    Sep
    2012
    9:00am, EDT

    Girl accused of blasphemy in Pakistan may have been framed by Muslim cleric

    Ilyas Sheikh / EPA

    Pakistani Christian minority members carry placards for the release of a Christian girl, Rimsha Masih -- arrested on charges of blasphemy -- during a protest in Faisalabad, Pakistan, Monday.

    By Amna Nawaz, NBC News

    Rimsha Masih, the Christian Pakistani girl accused of blasphemy for burning holy Muslim texts may have been framed by a local Muslim cleric who was among the first to accuse her of the crime, police officials said on Sunday.

    Khalid Jadoon was arrested after witnesses from Masih's village, on the outskirts of the country’s capital, complained about his alleged actions.


    The cleric appeared briefly in court on Sunday before he was sent to jail for a 14-day judicial remand.

    Religious and secular groups worldwide have protested over the detention in August of Rimsha Masih, accused by Muslim neighbors of burning Islamic religious texts.

    Pakistani Christians live in fear after girl's blasphemy arrest

    A local man, Hafiz Zubair, came forward to offer testimony in which he claims to have seen Jadoon fabricating evidence by mixing holy text pages with ashes.

    Speaking to a local news channel, Zubair said: "I asked Jadoon why he was fabricating the evidence. He said that this would ensure a strong case against the girl and would ultimately help them in evicting the Christians from the locality."

    Police official Munir Hussain Jafri told Reuters: "Witnesses complained that he had torn pages from a Koran and placed them in her bag which had burned papers."

    Life for All Pakistan, one of the campaign groups working to secure Rimsha's release, issued a statement in response to the latest twist in the story, saying: “This is a national issue and everyone who claims to be secular and liberal should raise their voice.”

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

    A bail hearing will be held on Monday for Masih, whose case has re-focused a spotlight on Pakistan's anti-blasphemy law.

    Under the law, anyone who speaks ill of Islam and the Prophet Mohammad commits a crime and faces the death penalty.

    Activists and human rights groups say vague terminology has led to its misuse, and that the law dangerously discriminates against the Muslim country's tiny minority groups.

    Critics of Pakistan's leaders say they are too worried about an extremist backlash to speak out against the law in a nation where religious conservatism is increasingly prevalent.

    Convictions are common, although the death sentence has never been carried out. Most convictions are thrown out on appeal, but mobs have killed many people accused of blasphemy.

    There have been conflicting reports about Masih's age and her mental state. Some media have said she is 11 and suffers from Down's Syndrome.

    A hospital said in a report she was about 14 but had the mental capacities of someone younger, and was uneducated.

    Masih's arrest triggered an exodus of several hundred Christians from her poor village after mosques reported over their loudspeakers what the girl was alleged to have done.

    Christians, who make up four percent of Pakistan's population of 180 million, have been especially concerned about the blasphemy law, saying it offers them no protection.

    Convictions hinge on witness testimony and are often linked to vendettas, they complain.

    In 2009, 40 houses and a church were set ablaze by a mob of 1,000 Muslims in the town of Gojra, in Punjab province. At least seven Christians were burned to death. The attacks were triggered by reports of the desecration of the Koran.

    Two Christian brothers accused of writing a blasphemous letter against the Prophet Mohammad were gunned down outside a court in the eastern city of Faisalabad in July of 2010.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    435 comments

    A Muslim cleric lie to "frame" a young, mentally afflicted girl, just to have her killed? Do Muslims ever turn on these thugs that have kept them in chains for centuries? That cleric should be stoned to death if there is a punishment allowed for cleric's. But I wouldn't count on it.

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, muslim, girl, religion, islam, christian, featured, blasphemy, rimsha-masih
  • 28
    Aug
    2012
    5:12am, EDT

    Pakistani Christians live in fear after girl's blasphemy arrest

    Ilyas Sheikh / EPA

    Pakistani Christian minority members carry placards for the release of a Christian girl, Rimsha Masih -- arrested on charges of blasphemy -- during a protest in Faisalabad, Pakistan, Monday.

    By Fakhar Rehman and Amna Nawaz, NBC News

    ISLAMABAD -- Margrett Ghafoor, a Christian teacher in majority-Muslim Pakistan, says her lesson for the children she teaches has always been the same.

    "My message is for everyone to broaden their minds, and ignore petty matters," says the 53-year-old mother of two. "Let's live together in peace."

    Ghafoor has always felt free and safe when attending church services and practicing her religion, despite living in a country where at least 95 percent of the population is Muslim.

    But her Christian community in Rawalpindi -- a sprawling suburb of the capital city of Islamabad -- has been anything but peaceful since the Aug. 16 arrest of a young Christian girl named Rimsha Masih.


    Rimsha was jailed under the country's strict blasphemy laws for allegedly burning pages from a book containing Muslim scripture. She is currently in police custody, being examined by medical and psychological professionals.

    There have been conflicting reports on Rimsha’s age and her mental state. Some media have said she suffers from Down syndrome and is aged 11. Her lawyer Masih's lawyer, Tahir Naveed Chaudhry, reportedly said Tuesday that a medical board had determined she was between 13 and 14 and that her mental state did not correspond with her age. However, he said that it was “not clear whether that meant she was mentally impaired.”

    Farooq Naeem / AFP - Getty Images

    Tahir Naveed Chaudhry, the lawyer of a Christian girl accused of blasphemy, talks with the media after a court hearing in Islamabad Tuesday.

    Fears for children's future
    Ghafoor, one of 6,000 Christians living in this neighborhood, said the case has sent ripples of tension and insecurity through her community. She is now concerned about what her 13-year-old daughter and 10-year-old son may face in a divided community pushed further apart by the case.

    "I am worried about the future of my children if this situation persists," Ghafoor. "And I am very worried even if she [Rimsha] is released, she is not safe here."

    Following Rimsha's arrest, news of her alleged crime spread rapidly through the local Muslim community.

    Pakistani girl reportedly arrested for blasphemy

    People enraged by the accusations gathered at the police station, demanding the girl be turned over to them, so she could be burned alive.

    Islamabad Police Inspector-General Bani Amin said officials were "concerned about her safety," after "800 people gathered to block the road."

    He said Rimsha has been kept in "protective custody, for her own safety."

    There is precedent in Pakistan for the sort of extrajudicial killing Rimsha appears to have narrowly escaped.

    In June of this year, a man in Bahawalpur, in Punjab province, was accused of burning a copy of the Quran.

    He was arrested and held by police, but thousands of angry people attacked the police station, overwhelming local authorities. The mob reportedly dragged the man to the spot where the alleged crime occurred, beat him, and killed him by setting him on fire.

    Pakistan's colonial-era blasphemy laws forbid damaging or defiling a place of worship, defiling the Quran, or defaming the prophet Muhammad; the charges carry a possible death sentence.

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

    Christian activist Xavier William, president of Life for All-Pakistan, has met with Rimsha and is in touch with her family and local authorities.

    He described the girl as an "unable to communicate," and "in a state of shock," when they first met immediately after her arrest.

    "Keeping in mind her mental state, and the fact that she's a minor, I am more concerned about her health right now and her safety," William said. "Because if she gets released then again there will be a threat to her life."

    Solitary confinement
    Last year, William's organization carried out a study across 13 jails in Punjab province, interviewing 93 prisoners accused of blasphemy. The report found that the majority are kept in solitary confinement "for their own protection, due to the very real threat to their lives from other inmates and prison guards."

    The report concluded that no one accused and convicted of blasphemy had ever been executed under Pakistani law, but added that "hundreds of Christians who have been charged with blasphemy have died, many in suspicious circumstances in jails and at the hands of extremist armed attackers."

    Christian woman faces death for insulting Islam

    More disturbingly, the study found that the blasphemy laws were often used to settle personal scores. The mere accusation produces such a fierce reaction that an accused person stands little chance of being cleared.

    "The use of the blasphemy law has become a quick way of resolving disputes arising from business rivalry, honor disputes, disputes over money and property," the report said.

    The majority of those accused of blasphemy in Pakistan are actually Muslims who belong to various Muslim sects.

    In one case featured in the report, an 85-year old Muslim man in Faisalabad named Haq Nawaz claimed he was falsely implicated in a blasphemy case by a Muslim neighbor to whom he refused to hand over a government-allocated plot of land. Nawaz was accused in January of 2011, and remains in jail awaiting court proceedings.

    In another case, a 54-year-old Muslim resident of Jhelum named Muhammad Ashraf claimed he was accused of blasphemy after demanding a cousin repay money he borrowed to build his home. The cousin, he said, was unable to pay and "a scuffle ensued." Ashraf found himself jailed on blasphemy charges in September 2010. He was sentenced to death in March 2011, and his appeal is pending.

    William said that while the reaction to blasphemy accusations -- as seen in Rimsha's community -- has become "routine" in recent months, this wasn't always the case.

    "If you look at the cases two or three years back, we didn't see such reactions," William said. "Now we see society is becoming more and more intolerant, and such incidents are increasing at an alarming rate. There is an extreme mindset, and the intolerance is increasing. People are not open to talk about it."

    Despite this and the flurry of international headlines about Rimsha's case, Pakistan's leaders stop short of calling for reform.

    President takes 'notice'
    President Asif Ali Zardari took "notice" of her case last week, requesting an official investigation and report. A joint group of Muslim and Christian clerics announced on Monday they had formed a committee to investigate her case.

    Pakistan's leading cleric also called Monday for the Supreme Court to take up Rimsha's case, noting that the "blasphemy law is not wrong, its application and implementation are wrong."

    Those in Pakistan who have publicly spoken out about the need to reform the blasphemy laws have faced harassment, threats, and death.

    Former Punjab Governor Salman Taseer spoke often about his vision for a "progressive" and "liberal" Pakistan.

    He took up the case of Asia Bibi, a Christian woman accused under the blasphemy laws of allegedly insulting Muhammad. He was gunned down by one of his own bodyguards in the parking lot of an upscale shopping area in January 2011. The man who shot him claimed he did so because Taseer was a "blasphemer."

    Pakistani gets death for liberal governor's murder

    After Taseer's death, Minister for Minority Affairs Shahbaz Bhatti -- the only Christian Cabinet member -- publicly vowed to continue his efforts to reform the blasphemy law despite receiving death threats.

    In March 2011, as he was traveling through a residential area in Islamabad, gunmen ambushed his car in broad daylight, killing Bhatti in a hail of gunfire.

    Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States Sherry Rehman said it was important for Pakistan's leaders to continue to speak up, to "protect people vulnerable to the misuse of such laws, and continue to seek to amend them."

    Rehman, a former member of parliament, has received numerous death threats after introducing legislation to reform the blasphemy laws in 2010. Religious groups have also called for her dismissal and some Muslim leaders issued fatwas against her.

    'Fit to be killed'
    A conservative cleric vilified her as an "infidel," a "blasphemer," and claimed she was "fit to be killed."

    Rehman was forced to abandon her efforts at reform when government leaders gave in to conservative pressure, but she maintains that Pakistan's leaders must continue to speak out for all their citizens and for the sake of the country's future.

    "Extremist advances, the security challenge, the [former president] Zia [ul Haq] years' toxic legacy has led to a climate where even speaking about such laws is seen as a challenge to reactionary forces," Rehman said. "But we have to protect our minorities, and rebuild an inclusive Pakistan. We don't have a choice."

    NBC News

    Naveed Bhatti, a 26-year-old teacher, condemned the "brutality" of the way Rimsha has been dealt with.

    Back in the Islamabad area’s Christian community, people are in disbelief at the treatment of Rimsha.

    They expressed concern for their own security and hers, regardless of how her case turns out.

    Naveed Bhatti, a 26-year-old teacher, condemned the "brutality" of the way Rimsha had been dealt with.

    "The message of Jesus is peace and fraternity. It does not impart on us to desecrate the Quran," Bhatti said. "When I preach anything about the Bible now, I'm worried my family will be insecure and face allegations of blasphemy."

    Justin Javed Bachan, who also serves as General Secretary with the Pakistan Christian Action Committee, said the community was deeply concerned for Rimsha's safety.

    "Even if she is released, anything can happen to her," he says. "Her survival in Pakistan seems very difficult."

    Bachan, a married banker and father of two, said he and others feel "depressed" because of their vulnerability.

    "Any time, blasphemy law can be imposed on us," Bachan said. "I have met with the Christian community in Rawalpindi and Islamabad. They are all worried because they can fall victim to it at any time."

    Farah Masih, 20, a manager for a non-governmental organization, echoed that concern, saying she could just as easily, "be another Rimsha."

    NBC News

    Christian teacher Margrett Ghafoor with her teenage daughter, Alina.

    Margrett Ghafoor's teenage daughter, Alina, is around the same age as Rimsha. She attends school nearby, with both Christian and Muslims students. She said she had never had a problem with her Muslim school friends and expressed the hope that she never does.

    "I treat them as Christians, and they treat me as Muslims," she said, repeating lessons learned from her mother. "We should all stay together."

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    645 comments

    I am always amazed at the FRAGILITY of Muslim faith. In other religions, the relationship of the follower with God is personal and is grounded in sincere faith. A true Christian or Jew, seeing their holy book being burned will probably just shrug and maybe pray for the soul of the book-burner. Musli …

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