Pakistani police say they have arrested up to
40 people in connection with the killing of a Christian couple in Punjab
province who were beaten, then pushed into a burning kiln after being accused
of desecrating the Quran.
Local police officials said a mob from
neighboring villages formed Tuesday after a local mullah declared the couple
were guilty of blasphemy.
The mob allegedly marched to the couple's
home, broke down their door, dragged them outside, beat them and threw them
into the brick kiln where they both worked.
The attack happened in the town of Kot Radha
Kishan, about 60 kilometers (37 miles) southwest of Lahore, the capital of
Punjab. Police officials identified the woman as Shyman Bibi Urf Shamar, and
her husband as Sajjad Nasir Zurjah Nazir Nasir.Rage, grief
after killing of Christian couple
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan
(HRCP), which dispatched a team to the scene, said in a statement that the
couple had three young children -- two sons and a daughter, and indicated the
slain woman was pregnant.
"HRCP is shocked and saddened beyond
words by the callous murder of the couple and their unborn child," the
group said.
According to the statement, the HRCP team
"did not come across any evidence of desecration of the Holy Quran."
Desecration of the Quran is punishable by
death or life imprisonment under Pakistan's anti-blasphemy law.
Human rights groups have long urged the
country to repeal the law, arguing that it has led to discrimination,
persecution and murder.
It is often used to settle personal
vendettas, rights groups say, and people accused of the committing the crime
are frequently targeted by mob violence.
That, according to the HRCP, appeared to be
the situation in Kot Radha Kishan, and that the incident stemmed with a dispute
over money the kiln's owners said the couple owed them.
An accusation that the couple had desecrated
the Quran "was spread to nearby villages and announcements [were] made
through mosque loudspeakers," the HRCP said.
The mob that went to the kiln was estimated
at around 500 people, the rights group said, citing local police.
The HRCP said its team learned that four
policemen went to the kiln to demand that the couple be handed over for
protection from the mob, but that the owners "instructed their employees
not to hand the couple over and the policemen were also beaten up."
The kiln's owners were among those arrested,
the rights group said, quoting police.
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