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Christian girl freed in Pakistan blasphemy case

Vanessa

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Christian girl freed in Pakistan blasphemy case

AP September 09, 20121:16AM

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A young Christian girl, centre, accused of burning pages of the Koran has been freed from jail where she was held for three weeks. Source: AP

A YOUNG Christian girl accused of burning pages of Islam's holy book has been freed from a jail near the capital where she had been held for three weeks, a Pakistani jail official said.

The release a day after a judge granted her bail is another step closer to ending an episode that has focused an uncomfortable spotlight on Pakistan's harsh blasphemy laws, which can result in life in prison or even death for defendants.

Many critics say the laws are misused to wage vendettas or target Pakistan's vulnerable minorities like the Christians.

The jail official, Mushtaq Awan, said the girl left the prison in Rawalpindi, a garrison city near Islamabad amid tight security.

An Associated Press reporter on the scene said she was taken from the prison in an armoured vehicle and whisked to a waiting helicopter while covered with a sheet to protect her identity.

A Muslim cleric from her neighbourhood was arrested last week for planting evidence to incriminate the girl, an about-face in a case that has drawn strong international condemnation.

Even in Pakistan where there is significant support for punishing people accused of desecrating the Koran or insulting Islam's Prophet Muhammed, the girl's age and questions about her mental state have earned her a degree of public sympathy often lacking in other blasphemy cases.

Her lawyers say they will now push to have the case against her thrown out entirely.

"Her parents were with her when she was freed from the jail, and she has been taken to a safer place," said a member of her legal team, Tahir Naveed Chaudhry.

The girl's release came a day after a judge in Islamabad granted bail to the mentally challenged girl, a move hailed by the human right activists and representatives of Pakistan's minority Christian community.

Bail is rarely granted in blasphemy cases, and the decision signals a degree of sympathy that could result in all the charges being dropped.

The girl, who medical officials say is 14 years old, was arrested on August 16, shortly after hundreds of angry Muslims surrounded her house, and accused her of burning pages from the Koran, an act punishable by life in prison. Her lawyer has denied the allegation.

But in a sudden turn-around, police arrested a cleric after a follower from his mosque accused him of stashing pages from the Koran in the girl's bag to make it seem as if she burned them.

He allegedly planted the evidence to push Christians out of the neighbourhood and is now being investigated for blasphemy himself. He has denied the allegation.

The arrest was applauded as a rare occurrence when blasphemy accusers are held responsible for false claims.

In his ruling granting bail, the judge wrote that the arrest of the cleric cast serious doubt on the prosecution's case. He also said she was a minor, had mental challenges and that it was "not believable" that she had intentionally burnt the Koranic verses. On those grounds, he decided to grant the bail.

The tight security present during her release is a sign that authorities are taking her safety seriously in light of previous attacks on people accused of blasphemy.

Two prominent politicians were gunned down last year for suggesting the blasphemy laws should be amended to prevent misuse. The killer of one of the politicians was later lauded by supporters who threw rose petals whenever he appeared at court.

A man in the central Pakistani city of Bahawalpur was beaten to death in July by an angry mob after he was accused of blasphemy.
 
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scroobal

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Yes it is a failed state. It is only country in the wold that was conceived and carved out on the basis of a religion.
 

Vanessa

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Girl accused of burning Koran goes into hiding

Date September 10, 2012

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Hiding ... Rimsha Masih. Photo: AFP

THE 14-year-old intellectually disabled Christian girl at the centre of Pakistan's latest blasphemy controversy is in hiding under government protection, after being released from prison.

Rimsha Masih was jailed three weeks ago after she was accused of tearing pages from a copy of the Koran and burning them. The blasphemy law carries the death penalty and is strictly enforced.

To international outcry, Rimsha was charged, despite being underage, illiterate and with a mental age of 11, according to government medical reports.

Rimsha's case provoked further outrage when a Muslim cleric from her neighbourhood in Mehrabad, on the outskirts of Islamabad, was arrested for framing her.

Witnesses say they saw Muhammad Khalid Chishti plant torn pages of the Koran in a plastic bag of ash Rimsha was carrying, in an attempt, it is believed, to run Christians out of the area.

After three weeks in jail, Rimsha was bailed on two separate sureties of 500,000 Pakistani Rupees ($5000).

She was released from Adiala prison in Rawalpindi at the weekend. Wearing a hood over her face, she was taken under armed guard to a helicopter and flown to a secret location, where her family was waiting.

Jailing a young, confused girl has again brought unwanted international attention on Pakistan's blasphemy law, and has highlighted the way it is used to target the country's minorities. Despite her release, Rimsha's safety will remain a serious concern for Pakistani authorities for months, if not years.

Religious minorities are regularly attacked, with religion often used as a cover to persecute someone over a more prosaic offence, a land or water or money dispute, and there are concerns Islamist hardliners will seek to mete out their own punishment to Rimsha or her family.

Blasphemy cases attract hysterical attention in Pakistan.

Judges who have ordered acquittals have been assassinated, while freed suspects have been killed on release.

Salman Taseer, the Governor of Punjab, was assassinated last year by his own security guard because of his opposition to the blasphemy law, while Pakistan's only Christian cabinet member, Shahbaz Bhatti, was shot and killed by the Taliban for urging reform of the law.

Shahbaz's brother, Paul, has since become Minister for National Harmony, and said the government was doing all it could to keep Rimsha safe.

''We are in touch with the Interior Ministry and police, and they have assured us that wherever she stays full security would be provided to her,'' he said.

''Her mother is very happy that justice had been done.''

Amnesty International said hundreds of Christians have fled Mehrabad since Rimsha was accused, fearing violent retribution for her alleged crime.

''The Rimsha Masih case highlights the profound danger to communal harmony and rule of law caused by Pakistan's blasphemy laws,'' it said.
 
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