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Another Younus Sheikh

Friday, July 27th, 2007

In October 2000 a Pakistani, Dr Younus Sheikh, was arrested on the charge of “blasphemy” and he was later found guilty and sentenced to death. He had been an active humanist and campaigner, and only after a concerted effort on behalf of humanist and other NGOs and rights groups was he finally freed in 2004, after three years spent mostly in solitary confinement.

This week, another man who by coincidence is also named Younus Sheikh — a writer who has criticized Islam — has been found guilty of “blasphemy” and sentenced to life in prison. And once again, the media outrage is limited — at this moment there are just two related news stories on Google, one from Pakistani newspaper The News, and the other from the UK’s National Secular Society.

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Award brings renewed death threats for Rushdie

Monday, June 18th, 2007

The government of Pakistan has today added its voice to the official condemnation against the British government’s honouring of novelist Salman Rushdie (now “Sir Salman”) in the bi-annual British hounours ceremony. Iran had already passed a resolution of condemnation yesterday.

Of course, the rent-a-mobs are back out for their now-traditional bi-annual effigy burning photo opportunity. There have been renewed calls for Rushdie’s death.

Democracy

(Iran’s official position as of 1998 is that Ayatollah Khomeini’s fatwa against Rushdie was void, but the Iranian state media famously followed the announcement with news that leading clerics considered the fatwa irrevocable, leaving the actual state position somewhat ambiguous.)

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Pakistan improving women’s rights in the face of Islamist protest

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

By a huge majority the lower house of parliament in Pakistan has voted to repeal a 1979 law which made rape a matter solely of Sharia law. This had meant that raped women could be tried for adultery unless they could produce four usually male witnesses to an alleged rape. Of course this greatly reduced the number of successful prosecutions against rapists, effectively decriminalizing rape. The Bill now awaits Senate approval. Amid resignations and threads of non-cooperation, the opposition Islamic alliance — the MMA — is threatening national protests, angry at the “curtailment” of Islamic law.

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