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Hindu Man Arrested In Pakistan For Sharing 'Blasphemous' Content On WhatsApp

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 May, 2017 11:43 AM
    A 35-year-old Hindu man in Pakistan has been arrested for allegedly sending blasphemous contents through WhatsApp.
     
    Prakash Kumar, a shop owner, was arrested on Wednesday in Hub area of Lasbela district in south-western province of Balochistan.
     
    Senior Superintendent of Police Lasbela Zia Mandokhel confirmed the arrest after a compliant was registered by the local people against him.
     
    "Police registered a case and started a probe after arresting the accused. The cellphone used to send alleged content was also seized," he said.
     
     
    A local court has sent the suspect to jail for further interrogation in the case.
     
    Kumar owns a shop in Hub where local people also organised a rally in protest against him. The protesters staged a demonstration outside a police station in Hub, demanding the closure of the shop owned by Prakash.
     
    Violence erupted after police refused to hand over a Hindu man suspected of blasphemy to an angry mob, DawnNews reported, with locals resorting to pelting stones at police when their demands were not met.
     
    Deputy Superintendent of Police Lasbela Jan Mohammad Khosa and other officials were injured as the protesters hurled stones at them during the demonstration, The Express Tribune reported.
     
    A First Information Report was registered against Kumar on the complaint of various community members under Sections 295-A and 295-C of Pakistan's blasphemy law. The suspect was shifted to Gaddani Central Jail.
     
    An hours-long protest outside the Hub city police station turned violent, with protesters pelting stones at police, after law enforcement officials refused the protesters' demand that police hand over the Hindu man to the community so they could administer justice themselves and 'punish' Kumar.
     
    Search operations were underway to arrest those suspected of inciting the mob to violence, police said.
     
     
     
    Shops owned by members of the Hindu community were shut down and all roads connecting Sindh to Balochistan via Hub were closed for operations until further notice.
     
    The controversial blasphemy laws were introduced in Pakistan by former military ruler Zia-ul Haq in the 1980s and anyone charged under the laws became an easy target for extremists.
     
    The laws have been misused by miscreants and efforts to reform them have failed due to opposition by religious groups.
     
    Former Governor Punjab Salman Taseer was killed by his police guard in 2011 for criticising the blasphemy laws.
     
    Last month, a university student was killed by fellow students in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province for alleged blasphemy.

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