Christians pray among rubble of ransacked church in Pakistan

Christians attend a Sunday Service near the torched Saint John Church in Jaranwala on the outskirts of Faisalabad on August 20, 2023, after mob attacked several Pakistani churches over blasphemy allegations. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 20 August 2023
Follow

Christians pray among rubble of ransacked church in Pakistan

  • Several Christian homes, churches were vandalized last week in Jaranwala over allegations the Qur’an had been desecrated
  • Around 200 Christians attend first Sunday service after violence under heavy security, remain fearful of possibility of violence

JARANWALA: Christians sat among the rubble of their ransacked church for the first Sunday service since a mob rampaged through their neighborhood in eastern Pakistan.

More than 80 Christian homes and 19 churches were vandalized in an hours-long riot in Jaranwala in Punjab province on Wednesday, after allegations that a Qur’an had been desecrated spread through the city.

On Sunday, around 200 Christians sat in chairs set up in a narrow alley alongside the main Salvation Army Church — its cross still missing after being ripped down by the crowds.

“We used to come here without any fear but today we need the police,” 29-year-old housewife Nosheen Farman, who cannot yet return to her burned home, told AFP.

“We did not bring our children, the ones who we teach that they must come to church.”

A choir girl sang alongside a tabla player, as dozens of security personnel guarded the area.

The crowds joined their hands together in prayer, except to occasionally wipe their eyes.

Many of the attendees had come from surrounding cities to show support.

While the church was too damaged to host the service, Christians entered in small groups to survey the blackened windows and cracked ceilings.

“After the recent incident, we have a lot of security doubts. We are wondering whether we are safe or not, said 32-year-old Sara Ejaz, a teacher who is staying with relatives nearby.

“Is this our country or not?“

Blasphemy is an incendiary charge in deeply conservative, Muslim-majority Pakistan, where even unproven allegations of insulting Islam and its Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) can provoke death at the hands of vigilantes.

Christians, who make up around two percent of the population, occupy one of the lowest rungs in Pakistani society and are frequently targeted with spurious blasphemy allegations.

Hundreds of Christians fled the violence in Jaranwala, many unable to return yet — their houses gutted and broken contents strewn across the street.

Most of them are sanitary workers on meagre wages who occupy cramped homes shared by up to 18 people.

Some are sheltering at a government school or staying with relatives while the local government has promised to rebuild them.

“These buildings and houses will be restored, but it will be difficult for girls and children to come out of this trauma. They will always remember the terror they faced, that they had to flee their own homes,” said 44-year-old Samson Salamat.

More than 125 people have been arrested linked to the vandalism, with 12 others being investigated for using mosque loudspeakers to call people to protest, Punjab police chief Usman Anwar told AFP on Friday.

Two Christian brothers have also been arrested for blasphemy, accused of desecrating the Qur’an.


PIA denies social media claim its entire flight crew went missing abroad

Updated 10 sec ago
Follow

PIA denies social media claim its entire flight crew went missing abroad

  • Airline says the allegation emerged from ‘anti-Pakistan quarters’ to defame both the national carrier
  • Some social media posts recently said a PIA flight crew had gone missing during a layover in Toronto

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) on Sunday dismissed as “fake news” a social media claim that the entire crew of one of its flights had disappeared overseas, saying the post was circulated to defame both the national carrier and the country.

The statement came after social media posts said a PIA flight crew had gone missing during a layover in Toronto, Canada.

Previously, there have been reports that individual crew members have used layovers to remain abroad, often linked by analysts to economic conditions at home and perceived asylum opportunities under Canada’s immigration policies. However, PIA has adopted measures such as holding passports with station managers and assigning older crew to Canada routes to curb the trend.

“A tweet, circulated by certain anti-Pakistan quarters, claiming that the whole crew of a particular #PIA flight is missing, is entirely baseless,” the airline announced in a post on X, adding that the purpose of the message “seems to malign PIA and #Pakistan.”

“There has been no such incident, and the news is fake,” it said.

According to local media reports, the information had been circulated by an “Afghan and anti-Pakistan account.”

“The misleading tweet is part of a well-conceived plan based on hostility toward Pakistan and is aimed at damaging the reputation of the national airline and the country,” Pakistan’s English-language broadsheet, Dawn, quoted the airline spokesperson as saying.

Pakistan has been striving to privatize PIA along with other state-owned enterprises under an International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan program.

The airline was banned from operating in Britain and Europe, though those restrictions have been removed more recently.