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Punjab court sentences blasphemers

Bombs kill five NATO troops in Afghanistan
Kabul (AFP) Jan 12, 2011 - Five NATO soldiers died in Afghanistan Wednesday -- four in separate Taliban-type bomb blasts and a fifth in an insurgent attack, the alliance's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said. Three troopers were killed by a single improvised explosive device (IED) that exploded in eastern Afghanistan while the fourth soldier died in a similar attack in the south of the country, the force said. It later said a fifth soldier was killed in an insurgent attack in the east.

No further details, including the exact location of the incident or the nationalities of the victims, were disclosed but most NATO soldiers in eastern Afghanistan are US nationals. The deaths took to 17 the number of foreign soldiers killed since the beginning of the year. Last year, when 711 foreign troops died, was the deadliest on record since Western troops arrived in Afghanistan following the 2001 fall of the Taliban.

US military chief sees more 2011 Afghan struggles
Washington (AFP) Jan 12, 2011 - The top US military officer said Wednesday he sees an increase in bloodshed in Afghanistan as allied forces step up their offensive against the Taliban. "As difficult as it may be to accept, we must prepare ourselves for more violence and more casualties in coming months," said Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. "The violence will be worse in 2011 than it was in 2010 in many parts of Afghanistan."

Mullen, who met with foreign journalists, said the United States along with 48 coalition partners and the Afghan army made gains against the Taliban in 2010, but added that "we know the gains we have made are tenuous and fragile." "We know the enemy is resilient and we know the things are likely to get harder before they get any easier," he added. "Now is not the time to rest on our laurels, it's the time to press on our advantages and to redouble our efforts." Mullen noted that Taliban leaders have been eliminated or pushed out of sanctuaries in the southern province of Kandahar and Helmand in the southwest.

"The enemy is being pushed out of population centers, it's being denied sanctuaries and it's losing leaders by the score. Their scare tactics are being rejected by local citizens," he said. "I have confidence it will to continue to lose so long as coalition and Afghan forces increase their presence and their pressure." Mullen said the US expects to start a planned drawdown in forces this year but that the withdrawals "will be conditions-based." He declined to provide any new estimates for the US drawdown, which is expected to allow Afghan security forces to take over by 2014. "The Afghan army is progressing in a much more organized and at a quicker pace than we have expected," he said. The comments came at the end of the deadliest year in Afghanistan for US and NATO forces with 711 killed, according to the website icasualties.org.
by Staff Writers
Islamabad, Pakistan (UPI) Jan 12, 2011
An anti-terrorism court in Pakistan's Punjab province sentenced a Muslim cleric and his son to life in prison for blasphemy.

Mohammad Shafi, 45, and Mohammad Aslam, 20, were accused of tearing down and trampling a poster of a gathering to mark the birthday of the Prophet Mohammed. They were arrested last April for the offense that happened outside a grocery store.

The judge in the court at Dera Ghazi Khan in the eastern part of the Punjab also fined them each the equivalent of $2,700.

The sentences come after Punjab Provincial governor Salman Taseer, 64, was assassinated allegedly by one of his bodyguards who claimed he shot Taseer because of his public remarks against the blasphemy laws.

Taseer was getting into his car in the fashionable Koshar Market in Islamabad in the early afternoon when he was shot several times at point-blank range.

The veteran politician's death focused public attention on the blasphemy laws that dictate harsh sentences for transgressors. Nearly 97 percent of Pakistan's 175 million people are Muslim while less than 2 percent -- fewer than 3 million -- are Christian.

Religious tensions have been rising in Pakistan in the past several years and resulted in Muslim extremist groups openly attacking Christians.

In July, two Christian brothers accused of writing a pamphlet critical of the Prophet Mohammed were killed as they left a courthouse under armed police guard in Faisalabad.

Opposition parties have expressed concern that the government hasn't indicated it will reform the laws.

Many public rallies have taken place in the past year, organized by Muslim clerics, in support of the laws and against any reforms of them.

Taseer, who championed reforming the laws that in some cases specify death for blasphemers, supported a Christian woman awaiting execution for blasphemy. Asia Bibi was sentenced to hang in public for allegedly insulting the Prophet Mohammed during an argument with other farmhands in a Punjab village in June 2009.

Bibi, 45, is an illiterate farm worker in the Punjab, is married to another laborer and they have five children. She is the first woman to be sentenced to death under the blasphemy law but no date for execution has been set.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari can pardon Bibi. But he ordered a review of the case after an international outcry -- including from the pope -- over the death sentence.

Arif Gurmani, defense counsel for the convicted father and son blasphemers, said he would take the case to the high court because "it has been given in haste" and was the result of inter-faith rivalries.

"Both are Muslim. The case is the result of differences between Deobandi and Barelvi sects," he said. The accuser, Haji Phool Muhammad, belongs to the Barelvi sect while Shafi and Aslam belong to the Deobandi sect.

"Shafi is a practicing Muslim, he is the imam of a mosque and he had recently returned from a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia … I am defending them because I am convinced they are not guilty of blasphemy," he said.

However, Haji Phool Muhammad told The Express Tribune newspaper that he thought the two should have been given death sentences.

Chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, vowed to defend all vulnerable sections of society.

"To those who dare attack my religion, especially those who corrupt its peaceful message, are what I call covert culprits and you will be defeated," he said at a meeting in the Pakistani High Commission -- embassy -- in London.

"This shall be our jihad. Jihad against those who use our religion as a tool to justify their violence, suicide attacks and mass murder. They believe erroneously that their crimes will take them to heaven."

The death of Taseer, a veteran member of the Pakistan Peoples Party, follows that of Bilawal's mother, former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, and leader of the PPP. She was killed in a suicide attack when leaving an election rally in the city of Rawalpindi in December 2007.



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THE STANS
Outside View: An indispensable man
Washington (UPI) Jan 12, 2011
French President Charles DeGaulle cautioned the overly ambitious with the admonition that cemeteries are filled with the indispensable and irreplaceable. Regarding Pakistan, the good general was wrong. Punjab's late governor, Salman Taseer, gunned down last week by a member of the provincial government's Elite Police security unit, was as close to being indispensable to assuring Pakista ... read more







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