Police file blasphemy case over Hindu temple attack
KARACHI: Police said Sunday that they had opened a rare blasphemy case against nine people who attacked and looted a Hindu temple in Karachi during recent anti-US protests.Blasphemy is hugely...
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AFP
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September 30, 2012
KARACHI: Police said Sunday that they had opened a rare blasphemy case against nine people who attacked and looted a Hindu temple in Karachi during recent anti-US protests.
Blasphemy is hugely sensitive in Pakistan, where 97 percent of the population is Muslim, and allegations of insulting Islam or the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) prompt fury. Blasphemy can result in life imprisonment or the death penalty.
However it is unusual for Muslims to be charged under the legislation and nobody in Pakistan has ever been prosecuted for attacking a minority place of worship.
"A case under the blasphemy law has been registered against nine people for ransacking a Hindu temple and looting gold ornaments from there in Gadap Town neighbourhood on September 21," local police station chief Jaffar Baloch told AFP.
The accused, all men, were at large and police were searching for them, he said.
Police said that about 250 Hindu families lived in impoverished Gadap Town, along with other minority communities of Christians and Sikhs.(AFP)