The four accused who were granted bail said in the court that none of the charges under the penal provisions invoked against them had been proven.
Ahmadiyya Times | News Watch | US Desk
Source/Credit: The Express Tribune
By ET Correspondent | April 23, 2014
[Ahmadiyya Times Note: In this case police officials had registered an FIR in April 2012 on the complaint of Muhammad Hassan Muavia under Pakistan Penal Code and Anti Terrorist Act. Muhammad Hassan Muavia, a Khatme-Nubuwwat group operative, is the brother of Mullah Tahir Ashrafi, chairman of a Pakistani Islamist clerics group known as Pakistan Ulema Council.]
LAHORE: A judge of the Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) on Tuesday ordered that statements of four men accused of distributing a daily newspaper of the Ahmadi community, which allegedly contained blasphemous content, should be recorded on April 26.
The four are among six Ahmadis facing charges under Sections 295-B (defiling or desecration of a copy of the Holy Quran) and 298-C (an Ahmadi posing as a Muslim) of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) and Section 11-W of the Anti-Terrorism Act in a case registered with the Islampura police station.
The complainant had accused the Ahmadis of printing and distributing Jamaat-i-Ahmadiyya’s community newspaper Al-Fazal, which he had claimed carried blasphemous content.
He had stated in his complaint that Khalid Ashfaq was president of the Ahmadi organisation in Kareem Park and had been distributing Al-Fazal amongst people, even though the Home Department had banned the newspaper in October 2011. The police were informed and had taken Khalid Ashfaq and Tahir Ahmed into custody when they were distributing copies of the newspaper. A printing press was also raided where allegedly blasphemous material was printed. The police later arrested Faisal Ahmed and Azhar Zareef. All four had been freed on bail. Daily Al-Fazal editor Abdul Sami and another accused Tahir Mehdi have not been arrested so far and have been declared proclaimed offenders.
The four accused who were granted bail said in the court that none of the charges under the penal provisions invoked against them had been proven.
They said that the complainant had a grudge against them simply because they were Ahmadis. The counsel for complainant contended that the accused had committed the cited offences by distributing a banned newspaper, which he said contained blasphemous material.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 23rd, 2014.
Read original post here: Pakistan: Four Ahmadis asked to record statements in newspaper case
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