Two Editorials: The Blasphemy Law is Blasphemy

Posted on September 18, 2009
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, Minorities, Religion, Society
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Adil Najam

Pakistan’s blasphemy law, as written and used, is a blot on the basic principles of justice, on Pakistan, and even on Islam, the religion in whose name its defenders so often abuse it.

The recent death-in-custody of a Pakistani citizen, Robert Fanish Masih, has once again challenged all notions of human decency and demands our attention, our indignation, and indeed our anger. It reminds us – yet again, and as if more reminder was needed – of the inhumanity of the situation that this law places us in. A bold call has come from the Punjab Governor to repeal the law. It is well past time to do so. But there are others, including our Federal Minister for Religious Affairs, who continue to waver with excuses. But this is only one more incident in what has become a nearly routinized parade of inhumanity in the name of blasphemy laws.

Incidences of violence and abuse in the name of blasphemy have increased perceptibly. So must the indignation in society and so must the calls by all honorable people for its repeal. Two editorials today, in the Daily Times and in Dawn, make exactly that point. And they are exactly right.

Here is the editorial from the Daily Times. It is worth reading in full, and especially the last paragraph.

In the aftermath of the death-in-custody of the blasphemy-accused Fanish Masih in Sialkot, the Governor of Punjab, Mr Salmaan Taseer, has courageously called for the repeal of the infamous law targeting the minorities in general and the Christian community in particular. He was echoing the demand being made by protesters in Lahore reacting to the cruel thrashing Christian protesters were given by the police in Sialkot.

Fanish Masih was found dead in his cell. The police say he committed suicide, but the question for all of us to consider is that Masih was kept in solitary confinement even after the police knew prima facie that the charge against him was concocted. Also, there was confusion all around springing from a conflation of blasphemy with desecration of the Holy Quran. Masih himself must have been sure that he was in a trap where his death was certain.

The sheer negative jurisprudence of the Blasphemy Law shocks the rational person and instils despair in the accused. Yet, the Pakistani mind is divided over details that are accepted by all as shameful to the pride of the nation, equating Pakistanis with backward Nigeria where blasphemy laws have killed hundreds so far, tragically, in imitation of Pakistan. The irrationality of the public attitude came to the fore when the federal minister for religious affairs, Allama Hamid Kazmi, was asked to react to Governor Taseer’s call for the repeal of the law.

Mr Kazmi was grieved by the Sialkot violence against unprotected Christians but was determined to defend the Blasphemy Law. His case was of a piece with the one made by the conservative Urdu press and the clergy. He assumed that blasphemy occurred in Pakistan and that no Muslim could collude with it by removing the deterrence of law. But the facts were ignored by him. The truth is that there is no blasphemy proved in Pakistan so far, except in the lower courts where mobs carrying weapons force the judge to hand down death.

Any society free of extremism would grasp this fact. Why should a law be enforced in a society where no one can actually blaspheme? And what does it mean that after the promulgation of the law, blasphemy actually raises its ugly head? Hundreds of cases have gone up from the grassroots courts to the higher judiciary where the accused has been let off, except for cases such as the one regarding a woman of unsettled mind who is being recommended for mental asylum after a lifetime in jail.

In May this year, 500 clerics stormed a court in Lahore’s Mustafabad when a judge bailed out Munir Masih and his wife for keeping a Holy Quran in their home. The victims insisted they had kept it for spiritual protection and out of devotion; but the accusation was that they were unclean as a community and therefore the Holy Quran was defiled. Later the charge was changed from desecration to blasphemy, after which the court was assaulted.

In April this year, the Supreme Court rejected an appeal against a Federal Shariat Court ruling that death is the only punishment under Islamic law for blasphemy. This is what the victim knows when he is framed and put in solitary confinement in jail: he is going to die either sentenced by a scared sessions judge or killed by the police during the remand.

The Council for Islamic Ideology recommended in 2006 that blasphemy cases be registered with the High Court and that high officials free of local blackmail be appointed as investigators, but nothing has happened. Both the mainstream parties want the law repealed. Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani in his memoir complains that Nawaz Sharif as prime minister wanted to change the Blasphemy Law but Ms. Bhutto did not help him in parliament. Later Ms Bhutto returned to power in 1993 and wanted to change the law but this time Nawaz Sharif did not help.

The PPP and the PMLN are busy fighting their other less worthy battles in parliament, but if they had the wellbeing of the country at heart they could have joined hands to repeal the Blasphemy Law and then faced up to the extremist backlash just as the country is finally confronting the terrorism of the Taliban. There is no other way to tell the killers of our Christian community that they have to stop this horrible pastime.

The Dawn editorial picks up exactly the point made in the last paragraph above and asks why no one is looking at the real issues that we face – frankly, that includes the media (which is preoccupied with Meera’s marital status, Gen. Musharraf’s trails, Zardaris escapades, and the cat and mouse games of the political parties) and political pundits (who can always pontificate on global political conspiracies and grand geopolitical strategy but choose to remain silent on our own inhumanity to our own citizens.

Dawn’s editorial, too, is worth reading in full. And thinking about:

PEOPLE are dying queuing for grain in Pakistan. This is a country where food inflation is forcing parents to pull their children out of school – they can eat sparsely or be educated, not both. Lives are being lost to ailments that are easily curable. Street crime is rampant across a country where human life is worth less than a cellphone. Yet our political leaders appear oblivious to the misery that is everywhere. They seem to have no perspective, no grip on reality. Does a man who can’t feed his children really care whether or not Pervez Musharraf is tried for treason? Is a mother whose child has died of gastroenteritis likely to give much thought to America’s military presence in the region? Will a jobless person be impressed by the president’s much-touted ‘achievements’ during his first year in office? Our leaders have clearly lost sight of the core issues.

This is a country where religious minorities are targeted by Muslim mobs while the law-enforcers look on. Deadly attacks against Christians, in particular, are on the rise in Punjab. As is usually the case in such incidents, the violence has been triggered by unproven allegations of blasphemy. Robert Fanish Masih, who had been arrested last Saturday on blasphemy charges after Muslims went on the rampage in village Jaithikey near Sialkot, was found dead in his cell on Tuesday. The next day his family and community members, who had all been forced to flee Jaithikey, were prevented from burying him in their native village. And this heartless, inhumane act wasn’t the work of Muslim vigilantes alone. The local police also told the mourners to turn back, on the grounds that their presence could fan violence. In short the victims were punished, not the aggressors.

The Punjab government needs to take urgent steps to protect minorities in the province for the situation there is deteriorating. Its stance on minority rights will be gauged by its response. The centre, meanwhile, should start working towards the repeal of the blasphemy laws. For too long they have been used to settle personal scores, grab land – and to kill. These draconian laws must be struck off the books.

One does not have much confidence that our own words, or the words of these editorials, will make much of a difference. But following Faiz Ahmed Faiz, speak we must. Even if that is all we do. It is true that words alone can never bring change. But all change, always starts with words.

72 responses to “Two Editorials: The Blasphemy Law is Blasphemy”

  1. Omar Syed says:

    Thank you so much for writing this and the courage that this site has always shown.

    I know that the fascists will attack you and your family with vile personal attacks but as Muslims we all must stand for and speak the truth.

    I cannot believe that any true Muslim can support what is happening with this law or support this evil law. I really think the real enemies of Islam are the ones who use these laws to commit crimes and murders in the name of religion. They are destroying our true religion and they must be rooted out.

  2. ASAD says:

    Mr. Momin, maybe you did not read the report or it was not clear. The report is NOT about Gujrat or Kashmir. It is about PAKISTAN and what is happening to Pakistanis. Does not matter whether Pakistanis are Hindus or Christians or Muslims, they are Pakistanis and anyone murdering Pakistanis is Pakistan’s – and my – enemy. If they do so in the name of my religion, then they are also Islam’s enemy.

    If you want to stand with Pakistan’s enemies – that is what these murderers killing any Pakistani is – then that is your choice. My concern is what happens to Pakistanis in Pakistan.

  3. Momin says:

    “Amazing how the same people will complain about the ‘bad’ treatment to Muslims in non-Muslim countries and then treat non-Muslims in such human ways in their own.”

    Enough of this liberal crap.

    No one is saying that non muslims should be ill treated. However, accomodating non muslims does not mean that they can be given rights to abuse our beloved Prophet (PBUH). Anyone bringing disrespect to the Prophet (PBUH) deserves death sentence. Period. No compromise on this. If law does not award death penalty to such gustaakh fellows, then people will.

    However, if someone is misusing the provision to harass innocent non muslims, then he should be severely punished according to sharia law.

    ============

    “Maybe if you want a fair blasphemy law then it should make punishable ANYONE abusing ANY religion. ”

    What is unfair about Muslims making laws in their country as per their beliefs? You can blame them for being unfair if they demanded that others should also make their laws as per islamic beliefs. But AFAIK they are demanding no such thing. So what is unfair?

    In an islamic country, islam’s pre-eminent position cannot be negotiable. Haq and baatil are not the same.

    ===========

    @ASAD:

    “The parents of a young Hindu nurse, who disappeared over a month ago after leaving her Karachi home for the welfare hospital where she worked, continue their search for the daughter. ”

    Thousands of muslim women were tortured, raped and killed in Gujarat and thousands are being butchered in Kashmir right at this moment. Would you spare a thought for them also?

  4. ASAD says:

    This editorial in today’s THE NEWS is even more disturbing than the ones above:

    The parents of a young Hindu nurse, who disappeared over a month ago after leaving her Karachi home for the welfare hospital where she worked, continue their search for the daughter. So far their efforts have proved futile. They are not alone. The Sindh Assembly was told in its last session that during the last four months of the current year, 30 to 35 members of minority communities – most of them Hindu – had been kidnapped; eighteen girls had converted to Islam and one was killed. The fate of the others is presumably unknown.

    The pattern is one that has accelerated sharply in recent years. Christians in Punjab have made similar complaints centred around the issue of young girls, some mere teenagers, who have been forced to convert and marry Muslim men. The details compiled by rights groups indicate that the life of such women is often grim. Some have tried to escape, others have been murdered. This is one part of the growing violence against minorities that we are seeing. The matter needs to be paid urgent attention to. No society so deeply fractured by sectarian divide can blossom. Pakistan must prove it is a state capable of offering a safe place to live for all its citizens. This, after all, is the vision that was laid out by the founder of the nation. It is our duty, as citizens, to ensure that it is turned into reality.

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