Japan News and Discussion
Tuesday 04th August, 04:17 AM JST
GOJRA, Pakistan —
Almas Hameed grabbed his 7-year-old daughter and stumbled out of their smoke-filled home as she pleaded in vain to bring her pet parrots. His wife, father and two other children did not survive.
Outside, hundreds of enraged Muslims called the victims “dogs” as they fired guns and burned house after house in the Christian neighborhood of this eastern Pakistani city. The weekend rampage left eight Christians dead. All but one were relatives of Hameed.
“We always live in fear,” said Hameed, 50. “I wonder if I will see a time in this country when I can live like an equal citizen.”
The attack, which Pakistani officials said was incited by a radical Islamist group, followed rumors that some Christians had desecrated a Quran—an act regarded as sacrilege by Muslims. The violence drew condemnation Monday from the prime minister and the pope, a chilling reminder of how religious extremism has left minority religious groups in this country increasingly vulnerable.
On Monday, paramilitary troops patrolled near the dozens of targeted houses, with their blackened walls, charred furniture, and twisted ceiling fans. Six people died in the fires, two by gunshots.
Authorities urged calm and promised that local police would be investigated for their inability to stop the violence, which spiraled even after an initial probe debunked the rumor that a Quran had been defiled.
“It was like hell. Nobody was coming to help us,” said Atique Masih, a 23-year-old Christian who was shot in his right leg.
Christian schools across the country closed for three days starting Monday.
“We are closing the schools to show our anger and concern,” Bishop Sadiq Daniel told The Associated Press, emphasizing the move was a peaceful tactic. “We want the government to bring all perpetrators of the crime to justice.”
In a telegram, Pope Benedict XVI said he was “deeply grieved” to hear of the “senseless attack.”
Benedict sent his condolences to families of the victims and called on the Christians “not to be deterred in their efforts to help build a society which, with a profound sense of trust in religious and human values, is marked by mutual respect among all its members.”
Christians—Protestants and Catholics among them—make up less than 5% of Muslim-majority Pakistan’s 175 million people, according to the CIA World Factbook. They generally live in peace with their Muslim neighbors.
Extremists, however, have made Christians and other minority religious groups a target. Earlier this summer in the Kasur area, for instance, Muslims set fire to dozens of Christian homes, according to local news accounts.
The anti-minority phenomenon seems to be getting worse as Taliban militancy has gained strength.
In March, the Taliban issued an ultimatum to the leaders of more than 25 Sikh families in a tribal region near the Afghan border: Convert to Islam and join the jihad or pay 5 billion rupees—roughly $62 million—for protection.
Gojra, a small city about 354 kilometers southwest of the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, lies in a region dotted with hard-line Islamist schools.
The anti-Christian riots began Thursday and reached their peak Saturday, when Hameed’s home was torched.
Officials said the carnage was spearheaded by members of the banned Sunni Muslim extremist group Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan, which more frequently targets minority Shiite Muslims.
Its offshoot, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, is linked to the Taliban and al-Qaida, and was believed involved in the beheading of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl and two failed assassination attempts against former President Pervez Musharraf.
Minority Rights Group International, a watchdog organization, ranked Pakistan last year as the world’s top country for major increases in threats to minorities from 2007—along with Sri Lanka, which was engaged in a civil war. The group lists Pakistan as seventh on the list of 10 most dangerous countries for minorities, after Somalia, Sudan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Myanmar and Congo.
Christians and other minority religious groups in Pakistan are especially vulnerable to discriminatory laws, including an edict against blasphemy that carries the death penalty for derogatory remarks or any other action against Islam, the Quran or the Prophet Muhammad.
Anyone can make an accusation under the law, and it is often used to settle personal scores and rivalries.
In Gojra, Hafiz Mohammad Shahbaz, a prayer leader at a mosque, said police briefly detained a Christian in the Quran defilement case but later set him free. That caused concern among the Muslim community, he said.
Shahbaz alleged that a peaceful rally of Muslims to protest the incident was passing by the Christian neighborhood Saturday when the Christians fired shots at its participants. “That triggered the violence,” he said, calling the killing that ensued un-Islamic.
Hameed, however, said mosque prayer leaders on Saturday stirred the pot by calling for every Christian to be killed. Christians repeatedly sought police help but to no avail, he said.
Federal Minister for Minorities Shahbaz Bhatti said Monday that the government would rebuild the burned homes and offer financial assistance to victims. Bhatti criticized the police’s slow response and promised they would be held accountable. He also said a weeklong celebration of minority rights planned for later this month was canceled.
Many local residents said they were in shock over the violence.
“We really regret these killings. I can assure that no one from this city could ever think of killing non-Muslims,” said Mohammad Naseer, a grocer who has lived in Gojra for 47 years and insisted the attackers must have been outsiders.
Hameed said his daughter, Aashi, was being treated for burns in the hospital.
In the courtyard of their gutted home lay two wooden-made bird cages.
The parrots were gone.
___
Dogar reported from Gojra, and Shahzad from Islamabad. Associated Press writer Ashraf Khan also contributed to this report from Karachi.
Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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6 Comments
thedeath at 09:33 AM JST - 4th August
And
wtf? No one would kill a non-muslim, and obviously no one would try to help them too. just let them die and say how much you sorry later.
Nessie at 10:05 AM JST - 4th August
How about holding the Koran hostage -- if there's violence, then you desecrate it.
Den Den at 12:11 PM JST - 4th August
What did the christians expect? If they go into the black heart of Compton or Oakland and start yelling the "n" word, do they think people will react?
Triumvere at 12:58 PM JST - 4th August
Den Den... the rumor is unsubstanciated. Probably never happened. Furthermore, the particular Christians targeted and killed had nothing to do with the incident, they were just chosen due to their religion. You can't seriously be supporting lynch mobs now?
Helter_Skelter at 02:58 PM JST - 4th August
Good point Den Den. Christians should expect to be shot and their houses burned by Muslims for a rumor about the Koran. Which is why all non-Mulsims living in Muslim countries should find a way to emigrate. Islam is an intolerant and violent religion. Best get as far away from it as possible.
elbudamexicano at 07:14 AM JST - 6th August
Pakistan sounds like one big black,hopeless mess of a hole. I guess it is time for the world to focus on the real terrorists hiding in Pakistan, not Iraq. I feel so sorry for these innocent Christians and Dendens comments are ridiculous. Whites shouting n..in Compton etc..would not make Blacks there angry enough to go on such a rampage, you might get slapped up side the head, but nothing like these ignorant religious fanatics in Pakistan. RIP poor innocent Christians. Time to hunt down the Taliban etc..in Pak!