Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Church, school set afire in Pak film fury Mob Targets Christians, Beats Up Pastor Son


Islamabad: A mob of hundreds of Muslim men attacked and burnt an 82-yearold church and an adjoining school in northwest Pakistan during a protest against an anti-Islam film, sparking concerns among the minority Christian community.
    The mob broke through the gate of the St Paul’s Lutheran Church inside the cantonment in Mardan city near Peshawar, on Friday while returning from a rally against the film ‘Innocence Of Muslims’. According to reports from Christians in Mardan, the mob attacked and set on fire the church, St Paul’s high school, a library, a computer laboratory and houses of four clergymen, including Bishop Peter Majeed.

    The mob also damaged and torched moveable property, including a car and three motorcycles. Zeeshan Chand, the 17-year-old son of a pastor, was beaten by the mob and had to be hospitalised in Mardan.
    Rev Binyameen Barkat, the treasurer of the Northern Diocese of the Church of Pakistan, said, “We were under threats of such attacks since last week and had requested the local administration to provide security to the church property, which they did. However, it was not enough to stop the aggressive armed men.”
    Christian leaders said those who attacked the church had brought kerosene and guns. They stoned the church, desecrated the altar, tore copies of the Bible and prayer books and later put everything on fire. “We immediately called the fire brigades, but the mob stoned
and did not allow the fire fighters to enter the church compound,” Barkat said.
    President Asif Ali Zardari today condemned the burning of the church, saying the ransacking of public and private property, particularly places of worship of other religions, was an “un-Islamic and condemnable act”.

    The government has also disassociated itself from railway minister Ghulam Ahmed Bilour’s offer of a $100,000 bounty for the maker of the anti-Islam video, saying it had nothing to do with the move. The police has also filed case against 6,000 people for anti-Islam film protests in Lahore, officials said. PTI

Hollywood jittery over Osama films

    After the fury over ‘Innocence of Muslims’, Hollywood is apparently terrified about inciting further bloody retribution against Americans, and has called a halt to releasing films showing the mission to kill Osama bin Laden. Two films — ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ by Kathryn Bigelow and ‘Code Name: Geronimo’— have finished shooting and are set for release before Christmas, with a third, the adaptation of ‘No Easy Day’ by an ex-navy SEAL, awaiting the go-ahead, says Daily Express. At least one studio has asked an Islamic cleric to ‘vet’ its script. ANI
Libya asks illegal militias to disband
    Libya’s president ordered all of the country’s militias to come under government authority or disband, a move that appeared aimed at harnessing popular anger against the powerful armed groups following the attack that killed the US ambassador. The assault on the US mission in Benghazi, which killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans, has sparked an angry backlash among many Libyans against the myriad armed factions that continue to run rampant across the nation a year after the end of country's civil war. AP


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