Posted on 08/17/2020 6:00:29 AM PDT by Cronos
Naseem was charged with denigrating the Koran and the Prophet Muhammad. Two years later, awaiting his bail hearing surrounded by police and lawyers, he was gunned down.
Faisal Khan, a 15-year-old Pakistani, beams for selfies with lawyers and police. Thousands hail him in the streets as a holy warrior.
His claim to adulation? Allegedly gunning down in open court an American accused of blasphemy, a capital crime in this Islamic republic.
Khan is charged with murder, which also carries a death sentence. But while lawyers line up to defend him, the attorney for Tahir Naseem, the U.S. citizen, has gone into hiding.
The teen, according to officials and witnesses, got through three security checkpoints on his way into a courtroom in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar on July 29, pulled out a pistol and fired multiple shots into Naseem, 57, at a bail hearing.
Naseem died on the spot, onlookers spattered with his blood.
His killing grabbed global headlines, put a fresh spotlight on Pakistans blasphemy laws and drew criticism from abroad, even as many in the country praised the shooter. The United States and human rights groups decried the killing and urged changes to Pakistans blasphemy statutes, among the harshest in the world.
Closer to home, Khan is a hero.
Its one of those cases where everyone wants to be his lawyer, Inamullah Yusufzai, who represented Khan at his first court hearing last week, told Reuters. Yusufzai said lawyers from across Pakistan had called to defend Khan for free, to support what they see as the justified killing of a heretic.
The case has not reached the stage for Khan to enter a plea.
Thousands rallied, calling for Khans release. Delegations of well-wishers lawyers, clerics, local politicians have visited the Khan family home in Peshawar to congratulate the family. He has received messages of support from the Pakistani Taliban.
A selfie shot by Elite Force police guards in a van escorting Khan to court after his arrest was shared widely on social media. Wearing all white, the teen grins broadly. Several officers smile, one gives a thumbs-up.
A senior police official, who said the force had looked the photo, said it was authentic. Reuters could not independently confirm its authenticity.
Another selfie shows a crowd, some black-clad lawyers, escorting a beaming Khan into court.
Blasphemy
The U.S. State Department, in an unusually blunt statement, said Naseem had been lured to Pakistan from his home in Illinois by individuals who then used Pakistans blasphemy laws to entrap him.
It called on Pakistan to reform its blasphemy laws and prosecuting Naseems killing.
Pakistans foreign ministry says a special team is investigating the case and it will be dealt with in accordance with the law.
But prosecuting Khan and any potential accomplices will be an immense challenge.
In blasphemy cases in Pakistan, an accusation becomes a death sentence, whether carried out by the state or by mobs or vigilantes, Omar Waraich, head of South Asia for Amnesty International, told Reuters.
The rights group said in a 2016 report, Pakistans blasphemy laws are often used against religious minorities and others who are the target of false accusations while emboldening vigilantes prepared to threaten or kill the accused.
In 2011, the governor of Punjab, Pakistans largest province, was killed by his own police guard for offering support to a Christian woman facing blasphemy charges. His killer was tried and awarded the death penalty, but not before thousands rallied for his release and rioted after he was executed.
Self-styled prophet
Naseem was born in a village outside Peshawar but had long lived in the United States, according to clerics and locals who knew him.
He often visited his village, where he expressed views that upset locals, said Wajid Ali, a cleric who runs a seminary there.
Naseems statements landed him in prison several times, said Ali and another local who knew him Naseem. In those cases, they said, the intervention of locals, who believed Naseem was mentally unstable, got him released.
On the internet, he kept saying things like, Im a messiah or a prophet, and that caused great trouble in our village, Ali said.
Naseem set up a website proclaiming himself a messiah, with a link for people to pledge allegiance to him. On LinkedIn, he described himself as Jesuss second coming, reviver, Prophet.
His distance from Pakistan kept him safe, even as he reached out to its Islamic seminary students to preach his messianic call.
In 2018, one of those students convinced Naseem to travel to Pakistan, where they met at a Peshawar shopping mall, according to court documents seen by Reuters.
He came thinking this student will believe him and others will join his call, Ali said. But the student had already told the police. They were standing nearby in plainclothes and they arrested him.
Naseem was charged with denigrating the Koran and the Prophet Muhammad. Two years later, awaiting his bail hearing surrounded by police and lawyers, he was gunned down.
religion of peace
COEXIST
Anyhow the kid was just peacefully protesting in the court room.
Not all cultures share the same values. Here in America the reasonable consensus of common values that once united Americans sadly no longer exists. A significant percentage of the population here would tolerate and condone such violence. America has changed 20 years after 9/11.
Coming soon to Minneapolis.
Nothing good ever appears in the same article as the word, Pakistan. Although this self proclaimed messiah did have rocks for brains to return to Barry’s favorite country. There is an interesting idea embedded here, see if other more tech savvy Freepers are interested. Establish a bogus fake muzzard website and claim to be THE MAHDI and produce a barrage of abusive posts on Islime and the Pedophile Prophet (piss be upon him) and beam them to muzzy sites in shitastan.
The Islamic Dark Age lives on in the pseudostate Pakistan. Once you read this, though, you won't be able to unread it.
Note to self.....never be lured to Pakistan.
Yeah, but muzzards are our friends, the media debunked the stories that they were violent. The real danger is Christianity which leads to a Handmaid's Tale world. /s
ISLAM: Building a bridge to the 7th century.
CC
They truly are monsters.
You mean not even the good food,the wonderful climate and the beautiful woman can entice you?
Not to pick nits; shouldn't that read "do" instead of "would"?
That would be California but I’ve been there and done that and I can resist it’s charms these days.
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