What's new

5 Bloggers weren't investigated for blasphemy - FIA tells Court.

No point in arguing with a mulhid about blasphememy in any case. It was not worth wasting my time with you.
as for the conspiracy theory point, we know how many were/are churned out by laal salam types. Better to check under your own hood before bashing others.

Good bye.


“When injustice becomes law, resistance becomes duty”

Many here confuse the law with justice here ....unfortunately.
And we shall keep resisting, thier facilitators aka pmln, ppp etc are now bieng dragged in courts and haifz saeed and other pro islamic parties are now bieng brought into mainstream, Imran Khan is bieng geared up for office on the other hand, future is not very bright here for these mulhad bastards...

Ap jaisay ? jantay hi kiya hain ap meray baray mein janab jo aisa kah rahay hain ? baqi rahi baat Mullah ki, to janab ki itela k liyay arz hai k Mullahiat ek sauch hai aur her molvi mullah nahi hota, haan albatta aj kal bina darhi k mullahon ki bhi kasrat hai hamaray haan, ab isi thread ko daikh lijiyay .. Allah k fazal se parhay likhay jahil aur angrezi bolnay walay Mullahon ki lambi qatar lagi hai yahan ..
Jahan tak rahe bat ap ke bary men jan'ney ke to aqal mand ke liye aik ishara kafi hot hai, ap to Mashallah se chand hazar isharay de chuke hen, aur jee bilkul ais forum pe kafi la deen, surkhay aur goron ke pilay bht kasrat men pae jatay hen aur Mashallah jis talent se ap ne molvi men se mullah ko nikala, ap ke liye taali to banti hai. Aur mahir e nafsiyaat bhi kya khoob farmaty hen ke jahalat ka ilzam lagany waly bht bhari aksariyat men khud jahalat ke marz ka shikar hote hen, u knw outward projection of internal porblems as an unconscious defence mechanism and all that, aur ab mera dunya men ja kar apni "jahaalat" phelanay ka waqt hua jata hai, ais liye abhi ke liye mjhe ijazat den, jahaalat rahe to inshallah phir bat karen gay.
 
aur ab mera dunya men ja kar apni "jahaalat" phelanay ka waqt hua jata hai, ais liye abhi ke liye mjhe ijazat den, jahaalat rahe to inshallah phir bat karen gay.

hoa jata nahi, hoa chahta hai hazoor :lol:

Ap ki islah to hamaray bas ki baat nahi, saucha ap ki urdu hi theek ker dain :D

Khuda apko jahalat se aur duniya ko apki jahalat se mehfooz rakhay :enjoy:

have a nice day ...
 
hoa jata nahi, hoa chahta hai hazoor :lol:

Ap ki islah to hamaray bas ki baat nahi, saucha ap ki urdu hi theek ker dain :D

Khuda apko jahalat se aur duniya ko apki jahalat se mehfooz rakhay :enjoy:

have a nice day ...

Much of the following applies to the five bloggers too:

https://www.dawn.com/news/1378276/a-prison-of-our-own-making

A prison of our own making
Tariq Khosa December 23, 2017
597



IN Shakespeare’s Hamlet, the prince greets two visitors to the royal court by asking what they have “deserved at the hands of fortune that she sends you to prison hither?” Surprised, one visitor asks what he means by ‘prison’. Hamlet says, “Denmark is a prison.” The other visitor comments that if so, the whole world is a prison. Hamlet says it is, and “a goodly one, in which there are many confines, wards and dungeons, Denmark being one o’ th’ worst”. The other visitor disagrees. Hamlet’s reply is profound: “Why, then, ‘tis none to you, for there is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so. To me it is a prison.”

Raza Khan, a social activist, went missing in Lahore on Dec 2. His fault? The courage to express his opinions openly, invoking the wrath of the invisible, dark forces who consider themselves above the law. The message for him and others of his ilk is clear: you are no longer safe in your own homes. It is better to be silent and cow before the forces of darkness. “But we will not be silenced,” said the select group of lawyers and activists at a recent press conference, adding that “we will use every single platform we have available to agitate” against this latest case of enforced disappearance.

Raza is the seventh activist to go missing this year. Before they returned to their homes, for up to two months the others were ‘imprisoned’, silenced and disgraced for advocating for causes they believed in. Their bodily bruises may have healed by now, but their mutilated souls will remain tormented. Raza is the latest ‘prisoner’ apparently taken to purgatory to purge him of views that are perceived as ‘foul’ or ‘seditious’ by the invisible guardians of our national interests. Hopefully, he will return alive to breathe in a wider prison, as in the words of Richard Lovelace, “Stone walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage.” He stands divested of liberty and freedom, and will carry the burden of the beastly behaviour meted out to him.

This brings me back to Hamlet’s cry, “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.” Pakistan, too, is a prison for all those conscientious, courageous activists and thinkers who strive to improve the lives of others. Rising above narrow self-interest, they want to promote peace, progress and tolerance. They have a right to dream big. Why should this right be denied? If, consciously or unconsciously, they break any law, the constitutional requirement of due process, fair investigation and transparent trial cannot be denied to them. Unfortunately, Pakistan is not only a ‘prison’ for political dissidents and social activists — it has become an inferno for religious minorities facing persecution and summary prosecution at the hands of bigoted brigades.

My complaint is against the guardians of the Constitution who take an oath to abide by it, ie the state institutions that are letting down the people they serve by acting either as cowards or culprits. Take the police: either they do not register cases of enforced disappearance, or file an FIR against ‘unknown’ culprits while waiting for the victim to be ‘found’ dead or alive. Highly professional, competent senior police officers avoid taking the path where angels fear to tread. Culprits are known, but are considered to be above the law. Why bother to swim against the tide? Based on circumstantial evidence, formal questions are not asked from the heads of ‘secret agencies’. Thus, a culture of impunity is further entrenched among institutions that are not governed under any legal framework.

The other complaint I want to respectfully lodge is with the esteemed judiciary. Why has no suo motu notice been taken of the recent disappearances? The present chief justice of Pakistan himself inquired into the disappearance, torture and death of journalist Saleem Shahzad. He recommended that the intelligence agencies be made accountable and be governed under a legal framework — back in 2011-12. The executive and parliament failed to implement his recommendations. To date, the deep state is like an unbridled horse, without the reins of law or control through judicial or parliamentary oversight.

During the days of judicial activism in 2007, when I was IGP Balochistan, the then chief justice of Pakistan took strong notice of the missing persons issue. Police, civil armed forces and intelligence agencies were made to identify and recover many ‘missing’ persons, and the military regime was forced to cough up many illegally kidnapped victims of state tyranny.

My recommendation then to the federal government was based on the law: detain the suspects under the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance for up to three months in duly notified lock-ups and commission a probe by joint interrogation teams comprising members of the police’s counterterrorism department and intelligence agencies. Those against whom no evidence was found should be declared ‘white’ and released; those against whom strong suspicion but no solid evidence existed should be declared ‘grey’ and conditionally released with restricted movement; and those against whom sufficient evidence was collected should be declared ‘black’ and prosecuted in anti-terrorism courts — but no illegal detentions at secret locations, please. This was a combination of administrative and judicial processes in view of the extraordinary challenges faced by the state.

If the judiciary can undertake firm accountability of allegedly corrupt politicians, why should it not take strong notice of transgressions of the executive arms of the state trampling upon the fundamental rights of citizens whose voices are being muzzled by the barrel of the gun? As the year draws to a close, with the spectre of enforced disappearances haunting us all, I say with a heavy heart that we are indeed living in a prison. To me, safeguarding freedom of expression, right of peaceful dissent, avoiding illegal detentions and ensuring due process of law are more if not equally important to combating corruption across the board — including among our sacred cows.

The writer is former IG Police and author of The Faltering State (2017).

Published in Dawn, December 23rd, 2017
 
The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) told the Islamabad High Court on Friday that no evidence had been found against the five bloggers who were accused of posting blasphemous content online earlier this year...Five bloggers – Salman Haider, Waqas Goraya, Asim Saeed, Ahmed Raza Naseer and Samar Abbas – had gone missing in the first and second week of January from different parts of the country -
logo.png

Pakistani Activist Critical Of Military Returns After Disappearing A Year Ago
March 10, 2018
DA131686-72CA-476C-897C-429907DA9AB0_cx0_cy11_cw0_w1023_r1_s.jpg

Samar Abbas went missing mysteriously in January 2017 while visiting Islamabad along with four other activists and bloggers whose writing was critical of the army’s interference in politics.

A missing Pakistani activist has returned home more than one year after he was allegedly picked up by the country’s military spy agency for criticizing the army, fellow activists said on March 10.

“Samar Abbas has returned home and he is safe,” said Talib Abbas, the activist’s colleague at the Civil Progressive Alliance Pakistan, the organization they worked for.

Samar Abbas went missing mysteriously in January 2017 while visiting Islamabad along with four other activists and bloggers whose writing was critical of the army’s interference in politics.

Television commentators thought to be close to the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency later accused Abbas and others of being behind a Facebook page which they said had committed blasphemy.

Blasphemy is a highly charged allegation in Pakistan, where insulting the Prophet Muhammad is punishable by death and even being accused could lead to mob violence and lynchings.

The other bloggers returned home one by one nearly a month after their disappearance from different cities, and at least two of them said they were kidnapped and tortured by ISI agents. The military denied the accusations.

Several of them have since fled Pakistan, fearing for their lives.

Abbas's colleague Talib did not say exactly when he returned home, but The Express Tribune newspaper reported he was released on the outskirts of the southern city of Karachi on March 6.

The disappearance of civilians, especially those critical of the military, is common in Pakistan.

In December, social activist Raza Khan, whose organization worked for people-to-people contacts between Pakistan and rival India, went missing from the eastern city of Lahore. Khan has not been heard from since.

On the day of his disappearance, Khan had posted comments on Facebook critical of the military and its suspected link to Islamist hard-liners

Based on reporting by dpa and Reuters
 
Polshiyas be like "uhhhh they were playing hide and seek with their families for a year , no wait this is actually just their attempt at trying to get asylum and it's a TOTAL coincidence that bloggers critical of the boys disappear just like that and are then accused of blasphemy"
 
The fact they were tried for these charges show how backward our society and country is.
There is no hope or future for it.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom