Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

An application asking for an investigation into the imam of DHA’s Sultan Masjid has been submitted by complainants who accused the imam of declaring MNA Sherry Rehman a ‘non-Muslim’.
Sherry Rehman, who has submitted a private member bill in the National Assembly proposing amendments to the blasphemy law, has been at the receiving end of fiery criticism from several religious political parties in the country. Concerns over her security increased after Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer was recently killed for his similar views on the blasphemy law.
Journalist Ali Kamran Chishti filed the application while other complainants listed are the late governor’s son, Shaan Taseer, and Sherry Rehman. The application was filed at the Darakshan police station on Sunday afternoon.
The application states that the police should file an FIR and launch a criminal investigation against the imam, Munir Ahmed Shakir.
“This is not just about Rehman or Salmaan Taseer. The whole point of this is that no one [has the right to be] judgmental other than God. If we have laws then you can prove something in court, but you cannot get up and start labelling people and inciting violence at such a sensitive time,” said Chishti.
“I was there at the sermon,” he told The Express Tribune. “At first, the imam indirectly praised Malik Mumtaz Hussain Qadri [who allegedly assassinated Taseer] and then lauded him directly. He started saying that the blasphemy law could not be changed and anyone doing so was wrong. He said that people like Sherry Rehman are now non-Muslims [because they are proposing changes to the law],” added the journalist. SHO Rana Amjad said that the Darakshan police immediately spoke to Imam Shakir, who categorically denied that he issued a fatwa or incited hatred against Rehman.
“We spoke to the imam. He said that this is absolutely not the case,” Amjad said. According to the police officer, the imam told him that he had only asked people at the sermon that keeping the situation in mind, they should not take the blasphemy law into their own hands and should let the courts handle the issue.
Shakir told the police that he had neither declared Rehman a blasphemer nor sanctioned her murder in any way.
“Intelligence agencies monitor Friday sermons and according to their report, such an event did not take place. We have told the complainant, Ali Kamran Chishti, to substantiate this [accusation],” Amjad added.
Chishti said that because there is no audio or visual recording of the sermon, they will be filing affidavits from three witnesses at the city court in Karachi on Thursday, following which they hope that the police will lodge an FIR.
A report published in Daily Times on Sunday stated that Sultan Masjid was being run under the supervision of Saudi Arabia’s military attache.
SHO Amjad said that they were looking into who governed the mosque’s affairs. Chishti said, “If it turns out that he is an employee of the Saudi consulate and has diplomatic immunity, the police will file an FIR based on the law for foreigners.”
Amjad also denied that hate literature was being circulated outside mosques in the area.
In an interview with The Express Tribune in December, former president Pervez Musharraf recalled how a DG Inter-Services Intelligence was exiting Sultan Masjid and had caught a young boy distributing hate literature outside while the police was simply looking the other way.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 10th, 2011.

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

Why I support PPP.
I don’t support ruling elite
But I understand that PPP men are the only who are having courage to do something.
Female MP Sherry Rehman facing blasphemy trial vows to continue

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

There is only one daring ,itelligent and real person..uska bhi fatwa zari ho gaya. wow..

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

there are countless fatwas on this, but people are ignorant… as far as this sherry fatwa concerns, people are making a fuss for a non-existing fatwa mentioned in a cheesy report with no proof.

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

Right. As I said, its only matter of time before some pious mujaid takes her out.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/female-mp-sherry-rehman-facing-blasphemy-trial-vows-to-continue-her-fight-for-reform/story-e6frg6so-1225990099960

http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2011/01/18/1225990/098049-sherry-rehman.jpg

Sherry Rehman, a leading liberal voice in the divided country, says that she is receiving two death threats an hour. Source: AP

                           **                                  A FEMALE MP trying to change Pakistan's blasphemy laws has herself been accused of blasphemy by hardline clerics.                                  **
         
              Sherry Rehman, a leading liberal voice in the divided country, says  that she is receiving two death threats an hour and that she has been  advised by Pakistan's Interior Minister to leave the country in the wake  of the assassination of Salman Taseer.

Like the former governor of Punjab, Ms Rehman has attracted the ire of religious extremists because of her efforts to change the blasphemy laws.
Speaking to The Times from her fortified home in Karachi, the former Cabinet minister and senior member of the ruling Pakistan People’s Party, said that she no longer dared to open her e-mails. A summons filed in a court in Multan, Punjab, alleges that she insulted the Prophet Muhammad in a television interview, a charge that she denies. She said that it was the latest tactic by religious political parties to intimidate her. “I am restricted to the house … The noise you are hearing is that they are putting in shatter-proof glass.”

Ms Rehman, who was a close friend of Benazir Bhutto, the assassinated former Prime Minister and late wife of President Asif Ali Zardari, has refused to withdraw a proposed Bill that would criminalise those who make false accusations of blasphemy - a crime that carries a death penalty.
She knows that she will be a target for assassination even after the controversy dies down. “Those who seek to target continue with their mission, as we saw with Benazir Bhutto’s death, but I don’t want to be hounded out of my country,” she said.
“The space for progressive forces has suddenly seemed to have shrunk and I think we need to take that back. It’s intrinsic to the soul of modern Pakistan if it is to carry on.”
Her stance contrasts with the position taken by leading members of President Zardari’s administration, who have failed to condemn Mr Taseer’s murder.
Vocal street demonstrations in support of the murderer, Mr Taseer’s bodyguard Mumtaz Qadri, have helped to silence Pakistan’s secular politicians and moderate clerics. One even demanded that a newspaper retract a statement of condolence reportedly made by him to Mr Taseer’s family.
Rehman Malik, the Interior Minister, has promised to prevent any attempt to amend the blasphemy laws and praised the religious parties for their “maturity”.
The failure of the Government to crack down on the extremists is seen by many as further evidence of its weakness. Facing US demands to mount an offensive against Taliban strongholds, as well as a gathering economic crisis, the governing coalition of mostly secular parties has chosen to abandon any efforts to take on the religious Right.
The controversial blasphemy legislation has been in the spotlight since Asia Bibi, a Christian mother of five, was sentenced to death for allegedly insulting Islam last year. Ms Bibi’s family and lawyer have been forced into hiding.
The Pope has repeatedly called for Ms Bibi’s release but Ms Rehman said that the intervention was damaging the cause. “However well-meaning, it’s just not helpful. We get accused of being agents of foreign powers,” she said.
Although careful not to criticise her own party directly, Ms Rehman is disappointed by the absence of support for her former colleague and friend Mr Taseer. “They’ve gone on TV and they’ve said he had it coming. There is an air of impunity and the fear is very strong. It’s like a witch hunt from the Middle Ages,” she said.

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

People are getting killed because of these fatwas and yet you say people should just close their eyes and should not even mention it as a problem.
Like Taseer if God forbid Sherry gets killed because of her stance, I am sure you will be justifying the expected murder in this forum by saying she got killed because of her carelessness like all the mullah brigade is doing in all these talk shows. For people like you if everyday happenings in this country are not to be taken as a proof, what king of proof are you looking for.

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

^ do not generalize by saying "all the mullas" because in this very same forum, there was a thread where a "mullah" as you chose to call them, appeared and he was not supporting the killer. also when you say all the mullas are supporting the killer, get your facts straight, there is one specific sect which is trying to glorify the killer.

every sane aalim says there is no place for "taking law in hand" in shariah. blasphemy or no blasphemy, thats a separate debate and needs experts of the field to discuss and close the matter with an agreement, but as far as law is concerned, sharia doesnt allow anyone taking law in their hands, and no sane aalim supports it. i'm not talking about the disco-molvies

and yeah, when you say "people like me" do not take everyday happenings as a proof, you are wrong, these are not only proofs of religious extremism, they are also proofs of mismanagement, deprivation and lawlessness... religious extremism (or even liberal extremism for that matter) which we witness today is not only because of ignorant fatwas by mullas, rather ignorant mullas are result of the above. when we just put the blame on mullas, we do nothing but effectively hide the root cause of the problem and get away with it...

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

	 					 				 			**Sherry Rehman, Pakistan's defiant prisoner of intolerance, vows to stay put**

			 					'These death threats won't make me flee', says Rehman, who supports reform of Pakistan's blasphemy laws

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  • 				                        	        	        	            [Declan Walsh](http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/declanwalsh) in Karachi
    
  •      			[The Observer](http://observer.guardian.co.uk/),			 																		 			       			Sunday 23 January 2011				                   		 	 		 		 	<li class="history">[Article history](http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jan/23/sherry-rehman-pakistan-blasphemy#history-link-box)
    

Sherry Rehman, a liberal parliamentarian with the ruling Pakistan People’s Party who proposed a bill to reform Pakistan’s controversial blasphemy laws, at her home home in Karachi. Photograph: Declan Walsh for the Observer All Sherry Rehman wants is to go out – for a coffee, a stroll, lunch, anything. But that’s not possible. Death threats flood her email inbox and mobile phone; armed police are squatted at the gate of her Karachi mansion; government ministers advise her to flee.
“I get two types of advice about leaving,” says the steely politician. “One from concerned friends, the other from those who want me out so I’ll stop making trouble. But I’m going nowhere.” She pauses, then adds quietly: “At least for now.”
It’s been almost three weeks since Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer was gunned down outside an Islamabad cafe. As the country plunged into crisis, Rehman became a prisoner in her own home. Having championed the same issue that caused Taseer’s death – reform of Pakistan’s draconian blasphemy laws – she is, by popular consensus, next on the extremists’ list.
Giant rallies against blasphemy reform have swelled the streets of Karachi, where clerics use her name. There are allegations that a cleric in a local mosque, barely five minutes’ drive away, has branded her an “infidel” deserving of death. In the Punjabi city of Multan last week opponents tried to file blasphemy charges against her – raising the absurd possibility of Rehman, a national politician, facing a possible death sentence. “My inbox is inundated. The good news is that a lot of it is no longer hate mail,” she says with a grim smile. “But a lot of it is.”
Pakistani politicians have a long tradition of self-imposed exile but 50-year-old Rehman – a former confidante of Benazir Bhutto, and known for her glamour, principled politics and sharp tongue – is surely the first to undergo self-imposed house arrest. Hers is a luxury cell near the Karachi shore, filled with fine furniture and expensive art, but a stifling one. Government officials insist on 48 hours’ notice before putting a foot outside. Plots are afoot, they warn.
She welcomes a stream of visitors – well-educated, English-speaking people from the slim elite. But Pakistan’s left is divided and outnumbered. Supporters squabble over whether they should call themselves “liberals”, and while candle-lit vigils in upmarket shopping areas may attract 200 well-heeled protesters, the religious parties can turn out 40,000 people, all shouting support for Mumtaz Qadri, the fanatical policeman who shot Taseer. “Pakistan is one of the first examples of a fascist, faith-based dystopia,” warns commentator Nadeem Farooq Paracha.
Is it really that bad? At Friday lunchtime worshippers streamed into the Aram Bagh mosque, a beautiful structure in central Karachi inscribed with poetry praising the prophet Muhammad. “He dispelled darkness with his beauty,” read one line. At the gate a banner hung by the Jamaat-e-Islami religious party offered less inspiring verse: “Death to those who conspire against the blasphemy laws.”
Qamar Ahmed, a 50-year-old jeweller, said he “saluted” Taseer’s killer, Qadri. “Nobody should insult the glory of the prophet, who taught us Muslims to pray,” he said.
A sense of siege is setting in among Pakistan’s elite. Hours later, at an upscale drinks party in the city, businessmen and their wives sipped wine and gossiped about second homes in Dubai. One woman admitted she wasn’t aware of Rehman’s plight because she had stopped reading the papers. “Too much bad news,” she said.
Yet Pakistan is not on the verge of becoming a totalitarian religious state. The fervour is being whipped up by the normally fractious religious parties, delighted at having found a uniting issue. Leading the protests is Jamaat-e-Islami, which made the mistake of boycotting the last election and now wants to trigger a fresh poll.
More significant is the lack of resistance from every other party. Rehman is polite when asked about the silence of her colleag ues in the ruling Pakistan Peoples party on the blasphemy issue. “They feel they want to address this issue at another time,” she says. The truth is, they have abandoned her.
The party played with fire over the blasphemy issue last November when President Asif Ali Zardari floated the idea of a pardon for Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman sentenced to death on dubious blasphemy charges. According to Rehman, he also agreed to reform the law. But then conservative elements in the party objected, a conservative judge blocked the pardon and, even before Taseer had been killed, the party had vowed not to touch a law that has become the virtual sacred writ of Pakistani politics.
The opposition has also been quiet. “The greater the failure of the ruling class, the louder the voice of the cleric,” says politician and journalist Ayaz Amir.
The mess is also the product of dangerous spy games by the powerful army, which propped up jihadi groups for decades to fight in Afghanistan and India. Some of those militants have now “gone rogue” and allied with al-Qaida; others, according to US assessments in the WikiLeaks files, are still quietly supported by the military. “Our establishment, especially the army, is in league with these people,” says Javed Ahmad Ghamidi, a moderate cleric. “And until they stop supporting them they will never be weakened.”
The furore has exposed the fallacy of western ideas about “moderate” Islam. Qadri is a member of the mainstream Barelvi sect, whose leaders previously condemned the Taliban. But after Taseer’s death, Barelvi clerics were the first to declare that anyone who even mourned with his grieving family was guilty of blasphemy.
Progressives demonstrate loudly in the English press and on Twitter but lack political support, having largely spurned corruption-ridden politics. Politicians say now is the time to come back. “They will be contemptuous of the politician, but they will not actually soil their hands with politics. But none of them has a constituency from which to stand,” says Amir.
And there are signs that extremists do back down when confronted. Qari Munir Shakir, the cleric accused of calling Rehman an “infidel”, denied his comments after Rehman supporters filed a police case against him. “It’s all been blown out of proportion,” he said. “All I did was ask her to take the law back. I can’t imagine calling her a non-Muslim or declare her Wajib ul Qatil [deserving of death].”
Rehman is unlikely to attend Pakistan’s parliament when it resumes this week. Her progressive credentials are strong, having previously introduced legislation that blunted anti-women laws and criminalised sexual harassment. But critics, including senior human rights officials, say she made a tactical mistake in prematurely introducing last November’s blasphemy bill without the requisite political support.
“There’s never a right time,” she retorts. “Blasphemy cases are continually popping up, more horror stories from the ground. How do you ignore them?” At any rate the bill is a dead letter: clerics are demanding its immediate withdrawal from parliament and the government is likely to comply.
Amid the gloom there is some hope, from unlikely quarters. On a popular talk show last Friday night Veena Malik, an actress who faced conservative censure for appearing on the Indian version of Big Brother, gave an unforgettable tongue-lashing to a cleric who had been criticising her. “You are attacking me because I am a soft target,” she railed into the camera, wagging her finger.
“But there’s a lot more you can fix in the name of Islam… What about those mullahs who rape the same boys that they teach in mosques?” As the mullah replied, she started to barrack him again.
Hope also springs inside the silent majority. “The blasphemy law should be changed,” declared Muhammad Usman after Friday prayers. Clutching his motorbike helmet, the 30-year-old pharmaceutical company representative said he was unafraid of speaking his mind. “It’s just the illiterate ones who are supporting Mumtaz Qadri. They don’t have any real religious knowledge,” he said.
Some analysts downplay the worst predictions, saying blasphemy is exceptionally sensitive in a country obsessed by religion. They are right. Pakistan will soon return to more concrete worries: Taliban insurgents, economic collapse, the rise of extremism. Yet there is no doubt the aftermath of Taseer’s death points to a country headed down a dangerous path.
“We know from history that appeasement doesn’t pay. It only emboldens them,” said Rehman.
She has no idea how long her self-imposed house arrest will last, but the precedents are ominous. In 1997 a judge who acquitted two Christians accused of blasphemy was gunned down – three years after the judgment.
“It makes me realise that life is pretty fragile,” she says. “But we don’t want to leave. I see no meaning to a life away from my country. It’s my identity, it’s everything.”

Re: Karachi mosque fatwa declares Sherry Rehman non-Muslim & demanding her death

PM Gailani says that **Sherry Rehman **was contacted after “Gherao” گھیراؤof her home but she said that she is ok.
شیر دی بچی Sher thi Bachi.
She look brave like her Shaheed leaders, Zulfqar Ali Bhutto & Benazir Bhutoo.
Sherry Rehman, Pakistan’s defiant prisoner of intolerance, vows to ](Redirect Notice)

Sherry Rehman vows to stay put despite death threats over ..](Redirect Notice)

CFD condemns threats to Sherry Rehman

There is other atitude.Withdrawal of amendment bill demanded