Media downplaying our anger: Qadri backers

More protests planned for coming week, Ahle Sunnat group issues fatwa.


Rana Tanveer October 03, 2011
Media downplaying our anger: Qadri backers

LAHORE: Hardcore supporters of Mumtaz Qadri protested against his death sentence for a second day on Sunday, but in far fewer numbers and with much less disruption to routine city life.

Some 150 people marched in a Jamiat Ahle Sunnat Pakistan (JAS) rally that culminated at the Lahore Press Club. They voiced their anger at the sentence handed to the killer of Salmaan Taseer. They held banners and placards and chanted slogans condemning the government, the courts and the media, as well as America and the Catholic Church for good measure. Clerics made speeches accusing news organisations of downplaying Saturday’s protests and made thinly-veiled threats about the security of their owners. Addressing the protestors, JAS Lahore Ameer Professor Muhammad Abdul Aziz Niazi said that the federal government had put pressure on the court to sentence Qadri to death. He said ‘Muslims’ would not accept this and demanded that Qadri be released immediately.

He said the court should change its verdict, or they would boycott the courts as well as any politicians who did not join them in their protests. He said they would not vote for politicians who supported blasphemers. He said they would not let Qadri go to the gallows, “even at the cost of our lives”.

JAS leader Qari Ghulam Nabi Chishti said the president should pardon Qadri.

Maulana Muhammad Naeem said the court verdict was meant to “appease the US”. He said the owners of media outlets would “only be spared if they start giving coverage to our protests against blasphemers”.

Qari Muhammad Nawaz said anyone who blasphemed or supported blasphemers would meet the same fate as Taseer and Shahbaz Bhatti. “If killing a blasphemer is illegal under Pakistani law, we reject this law,” he said.

Munir Chishti, a JAS member from Nankana, said if Qadri were not released, “the rulers” would be assassinated.

More protests

Meanwhile, the Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC) and Tahaffuz Namoos-i-Risalat Mahaz announced that they would mark October 7 as a “black day” and organise protests all over the country.

SIC leader Sahibzada Fazle Karim said October 7 would mark the start of a ‘Movement for Qadri’s Release’. He said the SIC would also support Qadri’s legal defence. He warned the government that hanging Qadri would “light the country in an uncontrollable fire”, and warned: “don’t play with this fire”.

The TNRM said it would hold a demonstration on Monday in front of Data Darbar at 11am. The Anjuman Talaba-i-Islam plans to protest at the Press Club at 4pm today.

Maulana Ameer Hamza, convener of Tehreek Hurmat-i-Rasool Pakistan, an offshoot of Jamaatud Dawa, said they would announce a “comprehensive protest plan” after consulting with other religious parties.

Fatwa

More than 500 Ahle Sunnat muftis signed an edict (fatwa) declaring that the sentence given to Qadri violated the Quran and Sunnah. They said that Islam permitted the killing of blasphemers and their supporters.

They said the judge should have consulted religious scholars before deciding the case. They said the president should pardon Qadri under Article 45 of the Constitution.

They said the chief justice of Pakistan should take suo motu notice, summon religious scholars for assistance, and then give a decision in favour of Qadri.

Published in The Express Tribune, October 3rd, 2011.

COMMENTS (7)

asad | 13 years ago | Reply

Ghazi Mumtaz is Hero of Muslims !

my previois comments are still awaiting moderation. Its THE END of foreign control on our media.

SABA ALI | 13 years ago | Reply

the supporters should also be hanged with qadri

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