This Article is From Jul 19, 2010

'Blasphemous' Christians killed outside Pakistan court

Lahore: Two Christian brothers accused of writing a blasphemous pamphlet critical of the Prophet Mohammed were shot dead on Monday outside a court in eastern Pakistan, police and doctors said.

An unidentified youth shot dead pastor Rashid Emmanuel, 32, and his brother Sajjad, and left their police escort critically wounded, as they left a court hearing in Faisalabad city, police official Amanullah Khan told AFP.

"Both brothers were rushed to hospital where they were pronounced dead," Khan said.

Doctor Rana Bashir, chief of main Allied Hospital in the city confirmed the deaths and said the wounded police officer was undergoing surgery.

The brothers were arrested on July 2, with their supporters claiming the charges against them were trumped up.

James Aftab, a senior church official in Faisalabad said the men had been "implicated in a fake case" while Atif Jamil Pagaan, a spokesman for Pakistan Minorities Democratic Foundation, also said the men had been set up.

"The charges levied on them are false as no evidence has been brought and no witness was present," he said, adding that the pamphlets were handwritten and photocopied, and anonymously distributed with the brothers' contact details.

Earlier this month, about 400 demonstrators burnt tyres and held protests in the low-income Waris Pura
neighbourhood of Faisalabad, a slum inhabited by nearly 100,000 Christians, demanding the death penalty for the accused.

Pakistan's controversial blasphemy law carries the death penalty although no one has ever been sent to the gallows for the crime.

Human rights activists want the legislation repealed, saying it is exploited for personal enmity and encourages Islamist extremism.
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