Christian groups are organizing
protests and meetings after the assassination of Catholic federal minister for
minorities affairs Shahbaz Bhatti today in Islamabad, the capital city.
Bhatti, 42, was attacked shortly after he left his residence at
around 11.20 am and headed to a meeting of the federal cabinet. Reports said
four gunmen surrounded his vehicle and sprayed it with bullets.
Prime minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani said he strongly condemned
the killing of the federal minister. He was at the local hospital where the
body had been transferred.
Both the Catholic and Protestant bishops plan to meet today at 5 pm
at the residence of Archbishop Lawrence Saldanha at Sacred Heart Cathedral in
Lahore. Vicar General Father Andrew Nisari, the meeting coordinator, condemned
the killing.
“It is not only the loss of Christians but of the whole nation. Bhatti
fought for justice and his murder exposes the weakness of government as well as
the power of fanatics”, he said.
Father Nisari also urged the government to refocus on the “law of
the jungle” dominating society. “It is clear that no-one can have a difference
of opinion in this country. If this trend continues, Pakistan will not only
become a failed state but will be left alone by the international community”,
he added.
Bhatti had been receiving threats for opposing the country’s
blasphemy laws. He stopped appearing in media after the recent killing of
Punjab governor Salman Taseer, also for resisting the blasphemy laws.
Bhatti was appointed on November 2, 2008 as the first Catholic
minister for minorities. He started his political career after founding the All
Pakistan Minorities Alliance movement in 1985. He had received numerous
international prizes for religious liberty, peace and his struggle in favor of
human rights.
A month ago the head of the Catholic Church in Pakistan expressed
outrage at the government’s decision to withdraw a private member’s bill
proposing changes in the blasphemy laws, calling it “an act of surrender.”
The laws make any insult to the Qur’an an offense punishable by up
to life imprisonment, while giving the death penalty to anyone convicted of
insulting Prophet Muhammad. Church leaders have long claimed that the laws are
being abused for personal gain and to harass non-Muslims. NGOs record 1,392
people were killed in blasphemy laws-related violence.
Source: ucanews.com
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