Mosques were attacked but no one lynched people in retaliation: Nisar

Interior minister says govt will not halt 'underage' convict Shafqat Hussain's execution


Web Desk March 17, 2015
PHOTO: ONLINE

Remorseful of the attacks but harsh in his criticism, Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar said on Tuesday the reaction of Christians to the Youhanabad attacks was ‘extreme.’

“Mosques and Imambargahs were attacked in Quetta and Karachi but no one lynched people in retaliation,” the interior minister said, while addressing the Parliament.

Read: 14 dead, 75 injured in attack on Lahore's Christian community

Condemning the attacks on the churches in Lahore, Nisar said “Youhanabad incident was heart piercing.”

“We stand by the Christian community but will take strict action against all those who lynched two men and vandalised public property,” he added.

Following the Taliban attacks on two churches in Youhanabad enraged residents beat and burned to death two men they suspected of involvement.

Read: One killed, 12 injured as Christians protest countrywide over deadly church attacks

Protesters also began smashing up shops and attacking vehicles.

“Mob rule is not allowed and you cannot block roads and beat up people.”

“Damaging public property is the worst kind of terrorism,” he added.

“Of the 21 killed in the church attacks, 7 were Muslim,” he upheld, claiming Christians are not the only ones being prosecuted.

Govt will not halt 'underage' convict Shafqat Hussain's execution

Nisar defended the Supreme Court’s decision to award death penalty to 'underage' convict Shafqat Hussain and said the government will not halt his execution.

“I got his execution delayed and launched an investigation into it but there is nothing more that can be done,” the interior minister said, while addressing the Parliament on Tuesday.

Responding to widespread criticism for political parties particularly the Pakistan Peoples Party and pressure from international human rights organisations, Nisar said the issue of Hussain being a juvenile when convicted has never been raised before.

Read: Shafqat Hussain: Case reopening plea hangs in the balance

“The issue of Shafqat Hussain’s execution should not be politicized,” he said.

Lashing out at PPP’s criticism on Shafqat’s execution, the interior minister said, “In 2012, during the government of Asif Ali Zardari, Shafqat’s mercy plea was rejected.”

“In the documents it is mentioned by the jail doctor that Shafqat is 25-years-old while jail authorities have written his age as 23-years-old,” Nisar added.

Shafqat Hussain, who is to be executed on March 19, was 14 years old when an anti-terrorism court sentenced him to death in 2004, for kidnapping and killing a seven-year-old boy. His lawyers and family have maintained that the boy is innocent and was forced to confess to the crime following a nine-day torture in police detention.

However, Nisar maintained that Shafqat’s mercy pleas were exhausted after investigation and ‘for a reason.’

“He was sentenced under the Anti Terrorism Act and the family of the seven-year-old boy he killed also have fundamental rights,” he added.

Earlier, senior PPP leader Sherry Rehman called for an urgent halt to the looming execution of Shafqat Hussain and asked that he be given a fair re-trial as had been promised by the government.

Read: Fundamental rights: Shafqat deserves a fair trial, says Sherry

“The criminal justice system of our country does not allow the death penalty for juveniles, and rightly so,” she said.

The Human Rights Watch urged the government to immediately halt the execution of condemned prisoner Shafqat Hussain.

Read: Govt must halt execution of Shafqat Hussain: Human Rights Watch

COMMENTS (31)

Rex Minor | 9 years ago | Reply @Ahmad Rafiq: What a load of crap you and your minister are putting out. The clergy is not misleading any one. He is blaming the mob lynching as if it is controllable and justifying the justice against a child ho was tortured to admit what he was not aware of ? There seem to be a conspiracy of all the members of the Sharif Government to stay ollectively and depart collectively. A child is a child and is a child and remains a child if it is kept in the Prison for eternity. This is the law of the universe and no human has the right to alter it. Rex Minor
Rex Minor | 9 years ago | Reply Is the minister going to resign, commit suicide or be forced out of the country in exile? He has a number of options, the kashmiri child who was totured and tried by anti terrorist court did not have any choice other than to leave it to the creator of the Universe. BBC should be the first to announce the stay order and not the Nawaz Sharif government? Rex Minor
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