Sunday, May 31, 2026

Islam’s License to Lynch: Welcome to Pakistan’s Blasphemy Law; Christian Man Sentenced to Death in Pakistan On Blasphemy Charges

Tehreek-e-Labbaik at Wikimedia Commons
Islam’s License to Lynch:
Welcome to Pakistan’s blasphemy law.
Pakistan’s Penal Code Section 295-C is today the most controversial and blood-soaked law in the country. It falls under religious offenses and specifically deals with blasphemy against Islamic prophet Muhammad. Its words state that anyone who, by words, writing, speech, pictures, or visible representation, directly or indirectly defiles the name of Islamic prophet Muhammad shall be punished with death, or life imprisonment, and a fine.
The courts have declared it a divine law and reduced the punishment to death only. In 1991, the Federal Shariah Court’s verdict removed the option of life imprisonment. The crime is now unpardonable. This law is used as a weapon for personal vendettas and against religious minorities especially against Christians. The facts also point in the same direction.
Since 1986, cases of blasphemy and desecration of religion have increased dramatically. This law disproportionately targets religious minorities, even though they constitute only three percent of Pakistan’s total population. People also frequently use it to settle personal enmities.
As soon as false allegation is made, the accused is murdered outside the court and the entire area erupts into riots. Mosques’ loudspeakers blare announcements urging, “Come and save the honour of Muhammad.”
For example, in 2023 in Jaranwala’s Christian colony, as soon as a false allegation of Quran desecration was leveled, more than six thousand enraged Muslims set fire to hundreds of Christian homes and several churches.
Similarly, in 2013 in Lahore’s Joseph Colony, when a false blasphemy accusation was made against a Christian man, more than two thousand people burned dozens of Christian homes to ashes.
In 2009 in Gojra (Toba Tek Singh district), on the occasion of a wedding, a false allegation of Quran desecration led a violent mob to attack a Christian settlement, killing eight Christians — including four women, a seven-year-old child named Musa, and others — while nearly a hundred homes were torched.
In 1997 in Shanti Nagar (Khanewal), thousands of Muslims attacked a Christian village, burning more than seven hundred homes, twelve churches, and thousands of Bibles, leaving thousands of Christians homeless.
In all these terrorist, inhuman, and religiously fanatic attacks, not a single Muslim perpetrator received even one minute of punishment. --->READ MORE HERE
Unsplash/Sameer Akhtari
Christian man sentenced to death in Pakistan on blasphemy charges:
A Christian man has been sentenced to death in Pakistan a decade after he was charged with blasphemy.
Zafar Bhatti, 58, was accused of sending blasphemous text messages from his phone.
He has always denied the accusations but was charged with blasphemy in 2012, and in 2017 he was sentenced to life in prison.
An appeal was lodged by the Christian NGO, the Centre for Legal Aid Assistance and Settlement (CLAAS-PK), which has been supporting Bhatti throughout his ordeal.
Last October, the case was referred back to a trial court by Mr Justice Abdul Aziz who said Bhatti should have been given the death sentence instead of life imprisonment.
Bhatti has now been sentenced to death by the Pakistan session court of Rawalpindi and is being held under high security due to threats to his life from extremists.
CLAAS-PK has called for Bhatti, a diabetic, to be granted bail and released from prison on medical grounds after he suffered a heart attack in prison last October, but the request was refused.
The charity says his health is continuing to decline behind bars.
Nasir Saeed, director of CLAAS-PK, said Bhatti is a victim of Pakistan's blasphemy laws.
"Since the promulgation of the blasphemy law in Pakistan, the law is oppressive and frequently misused," he said. --->READ MORE HERE
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