Five Ahmadis detained on charges of blasphemy in Layyah district have been held without virtually any proof or witnesses, the Human Rights Commission (HRCP) said on Thursday. The commission, which had sent a fact-finding team to Layyah district last week, said its findings concluded that an investigation, mandated by law prior to the registration of a blasphemy case, was also not held.
HRCP has demanded a prompt and transparent investigation into the matter to ensure that innocent people are not victimised. It has also demanded the government must ensure that the Ahmadiyya community in the village is not harassed or ostracised. The Commission has also asked the government to take prompt measures to rule out misuse of the blasphemy law.
The HRCP team learned that a prayer leader in the village had allowed Ahmadi students from a nearby tuition centre to offer prayers in his mosque. The students were later threatened by a government school teacher and they never went to the mosque again. Around 10 days later, some villagers claimed finding blasphemous writings in the mosque's toilet. The police and villagers conceded that there were no witnesses or evidence of the Ahmadis' involvement.
The HRCP team found that the elements belonging to banned extremist organisations and a relative of the National Assembly member from the area had pressurised the police to register a case. "It is clear that a local politician has also used his influence" to book the Ahmadis, the commission's report said. HRCP said the complainant and his extremist supporters are adamant that the Ahmadis should be punished on the basis of presumption.
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