Pakistani police officer shoots dead man accused of blasphemy after grenade attack on station

A man hurled a grenade at the police station on Wednesday in a bid to kill the man accused of blasphemy

Ap Correspondent
Thursday 12 September 2024 10:20 EDT
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Pakistani security officials in Quetta
Pakistani security officials in Quetta (EPA)

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A police officer shot and killed a man accused of blasphemy inside a police station in the south-western Pakistani city of Quetta, a local official has said.

The dead man was identified as Syed Khan.

Khan had been arrested the day before, after officers snatched him from an enraged mob that claimed he had insulted Islam’s Prophet Mohammed. Local residents claimed he had used derogatory remarks against the prophet and went after him.

After he was arrested, the mob surrounded the station, demanding police hand Mr Khan back to them so they could kill him.

At one point, a man hurled a grenade at the station on Wednesday while a group briefly blocked a key road in the city, demanding punishment.

The crowd dispersed later in the day after officials managed to calm them down.

According to police official Mohammad Khurram, the officer involved in the fatal shooting has been arrested. Mr Khurram did not provide further details.

Killings of suspects while in police custody are rare in Pakistan, where accusations of blasphemy - sometimes even just rumours - are common and often spark rioting and rampage by mobs that can escalate into lynching and killings.

Under Pakistan’s controversial blasphemy laws, anyone found guilty of insulting Islam or Islamic religious figures can be sentenced to death - though authorities have yet to carry out a death sentences for blasphemy.

Pakistan has witnessed a surge in attacks on blasphemy suspects in recent years.

Local residents look at a spot where a Muslim mob lynched and burned a man over allegations that he had desecrated Islam's holy book, the Quran, in Madyan in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Friday, June 21, 2024
Local residents look at a spot where a Muslim mob lynched and burned a man over allegations that he had desecrated Islam's holy book, the Quran, in Madyan in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Friday, June 21, 2024 (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

In June, a mob broke into a police station in the north-western town of Madyan, snatched a man who was held there and then lynched him over allegations that he had desecrated Islam’s holy book, the Koran.

The attackers also torched the station and burned police vehicles parked there. The killed man was a tourist staying at a hotel in town when the locals turned on him and accused him of blasphemy.

Last year, a mob in the eastern Punjab province attacked churches and homes of Christians after claiming they saw a local Christian and his friend desecrating pages from a Koran.

The attack in the district of Jaranwala drew nationwide condemnation, but Christians say the men linked to the violence are yet to be put on trial.

A policeman in 2011 killed a former governor of Punjab province after accusing him of blasphemy. That officer, Mumtaz Qadri, was later sentenced to death and hanged.

However, support for him grew after his hanging, with tens of thousands attending his funeral in the garrison city of Rawalpindi. Many in Punjab still today considered him a martyr.

Quetta, a conservative city in south-western Pakistan is also the capital of the restive Balochistan province, where militant groups stage near daily attacks and where separatists have waged a decades-long insurgency against the government in Islamabad.

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