Eight charged over Pakistani liberal student’s murder

Pakistani activists shout slogans during a protest in Karachi on April 14, 2017, against the killing of student Mashal Khan by his classmates. (AFP / ASIF HASSAN)
Updated 15 April 2017
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Eight charged over Pakistani liberal student’s murder

PESHAWAR, Pakistan: Eight Pakistanis who brutally murdered a fellow university student over his liberal views were charged with murder and terrorism on Saturday, court officials said.
Mashal Khan, a journalism student, was stripped, beaten, shot, and thrown from the second floor of his hostel at the Abdul Wali Khan university in the conservative northwestern town of Mardan on Thursday by a large mob.
So far a total of 12 people have been arrested over the incident and police are hunting for more suspects.
“Eight students were presented before an anti-terrorism court in Mardan over murder and challenging the writ of the state,” public prosecutor Rafiullah Khan told AFP.
Four others were arrested Saturday, Khan said.
Graphic video footage from the crime scene showed dozens of men outside the hostel kicking and hurling projectiles at a body sprawled on the ground.
Mushtaq Ghani, Information Minister of northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, said the government had also requested Peshawar High Court to conduct a judicial probe into the incident.
Students had previously complained to university authorities about Khan’s alleged secular and liberal views and Khan had been in a heated debate during a class the day he was killed.
Blasphemy is a hugely sensitive charge in conservative Muslim Pakistan, and can carry the death penalty. Even unproven allegations can cause mob lynchings and violence.
At least 65 people have been murdered by vigilantes over blasphemy allegations since 1990.
The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has urged that all those involved in the lynching be brought to justice.
“The state’s abject failure to protect Mashal Khan’s right to life has created great panic and horror among students and academia. Unless all those who played any part in Mashal’s brutal murder are brought to justice, such barbarity will only spread,” it said.
At his funeral on Friday, Khan’s father said he hoped his son’s murder would “evoke realization among people that killing an innocent is a sin.”


Australian bushfires raze homes, cut power to tens of thousands

Updated 58 min 1 sec ago
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Australian bushfires raze homes, cut power to tens of thousands

  • PM Anthony Albanese said the nation faced a ‍day of “extreme and dangerous” fire weather, especially in Victoria, where much of the state has been declared a disaster zone

SYDNEY: Thousands of firefighters battled bushfires in Australia’s southeast on Saturday that have razed homes, cut power to thousands of homes and burned swathes of bushland. The blazes have torn through more than 300,000 hectares (741,316 acres) of bushland amid a heatwave in Victoria state since the middle of the week, authorities said on Saturday, and 10 major fires were still burning statewide. In neighboring New South ‌Wales state, several ‌fires close to the Victorian border were ‌burning ⁠at ​emergency level, ‌the highest danger rating, the Rural Fire Service said, as temperatures hit the mid-40s Celsius (111 degrees Fahrenheit). More than 130 structures, including homes, have been destroyed and around 38,000 homes and businesses were without power due to the fires in Victoria, authorities said. The fires were the worst to hit the state since the Black Summer blazes of 2019-2020 that destroyed an area ⁠the size of Turkiye and killed 33 people. “Where we can fires will be being brought ‌under control,” Victoria Premier Jacinta Allan told ‍reporters, adding thousands of firefighters were ‍in the field.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the nation faced a ‍day of “extreme and dangerous” fire weather, especially in Victoria, where much of the state has been declared a disaster zone.
“My thoughts are with Australians in these regional communities at this very difficult time,” Albanese said in televised remarks from ​Canberra. One of the largest fires, near the town of Longwood, about 112 km (70 miles) north of Melbourne, has burned ⁠130,000 hectares (320,000 acres) of bushland, destroying 30 structures, vineyards and agricultural land, authorities said. Dozens of communities near the fires have been evacuated and many of the state’s parks and campgrounds were closed. A heatwave warning on Saturday was in place for large parts of Victoria, while a fire weather warning was active for large areas of the country including New South Wales, the nation’s weather forecaster said. In New South Wales capital Sydney, the temperature climbed to 42.2 C, more than 17 degrees above the average maximum for January, according to data from the nation’s weather forecaster.
It predicted ‌conditions to ease over the weekend as a southerly change brought milder temperatures to the state.