BFF-44 Pakistan PM praised for stand against hardliners, as blasphemy protests persist

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Pakistan PM praised for stand against hardliners, as blasphemy protests
persist

ISLAMABAD, Nov 1, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Pakistan’s Imran Khan won praise for his
stance against religious hardliners Thursday, as demonstrators blocked major
roads to protest the Supreme Court’s overturning of a blasphemy conviction.

Khan has vowed to confront extremists who called for the assassination of
the country’s Supreme Court justices, and for mutiny against the army’s top
brass, after the acquittal of Asia Bibi, a Christian woman on death row for
blasphemy. “We will protect people’s properties and lives, we will not allow
any sabotage,” Khan said in a nationally televised address Wednesday.

Blasphemy is a massively inflammatory charge in Muslim-majority Pakistan,
where even unproven allegations of insulting Islam and its Prophet Mohammed
can provoke death at the hands of vigilantes.

Khan’s speech drew praise across social media, including from those
formerly critical of the prime minister.

Prominent journalist Mosharraf Zaidi hailed a “remarkable speech” and a
column in the English daily Dawn said Khan had taken “an unequivocal and
strong line against religious bigotry and hatred that we have not seen taken
in almost two decades”.

“Prime Minister Imran Khan was admirably forthright in condemning those
who believe violence is the appropriate response to a judicial verdict with
which they disagree,” said the English-language The News, which is often a
critic of the PM.

Others however highlighted the prime minister’s mixed record on addressing
the controversy around blasphemy issues in Pakistan.

“Wish Imran khan had delivered similar speech in the last Faizabad
dharna,” tweeted Balal Haider, referring to Khan’s silence during similar
anti-blasphemy protests last year.

There was no indication Thursday that the authorities were preparing to
clear the small pockets of protesters that continue to block major
thoroughfares in the cities of Lahore, Islamabad and Karachi.

The demonstrations are being largely led by the Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan
(TLP) party, which is known for its hardline stance on blasphemy issues.

TLP, founded in 2015, blockaded the capital Islamabad for several weeks
last year calling for stricter enforcement of Pakistan’s controversial
blasphemy laws.

That protest forced the resignation of the federal law minister and paved
the way for the group to poll more than 2.23 million votes in the July 25
general election, in what analysts called a “surprisingly” rapid rise.

The party’s chief Khadim Hussain Rizvi has also vowed to “wipe Holland off
the face of the earth” over cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed if TLP were able
to secure power of the nuclear-armed country.

The protests come as Khan prepares to depart for a four-day trip to China,
where he will likely seek financial assistance from Beijing to shore up the
country’s deteriorating finances.

BSS/AFP/RY/1620 hrs