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Pakistani mob beats liberal student to death: police

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Hundreds of Pakistani students beat to death a classmate known for his liberal views on a university campus in the country's conservative northwest Thursday, police and witnesses 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 Mardan, sources at the university said.

Graphic video footage from the scene shows dozens of men outside the hostel kicking and hurling projectiles at a body sprawled on the ground.

The killing comes as Pakistani authorities including Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan have been increasingly vocal over blasphemy in recent weeks.

Blasphemy is a hugely sensitive charge in the conservative Muslim country, and can carry the death penalty. Even unproven allegations can cause mob lynchings and violence.

"The student has been brutally murdered by his fellow students," Niaz Saeed, a senior police official, told AFP.

"He was badly tortured after being shot at a close range... He was beaten with sticks, bricks and hands," Saeed said, adding that hundreds of people had been involved in the attack.

At least 11 students have been arrested so far, police said, and the university was closed indefinitely, with the campus largely deserted late Thursday evening.

"We are investigating the case but at this stage we cannot say anything" about the motive for the attack, Saeed said

However a police source told AFP that students had recently complained to university authorities about Khan's alleged secular views.

Blood stains are seen on a wall and the ground at a hostel at Abdul Wali Khan university at the site...
Blood stains are seen on a wall and the ground at a hostel at Abdul Wali Khan university at the site of where students beat to death a classmate in Mardan on April 13, 2017
ABDUL MAJEED, AFP

The source said Khan and two friends had been in a debate with other students earlier Thursday about his religious views which became so heated that teachers had to lock him in a room for his safety.

"But the enraged students grew to a mob and they attacked the room," the source said.

A university official who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed teachers had been forced to intervene in the debate "in a bid to save him and his two other friends, but the mob of students attacked the room and tortured and killed him".

Khan was "disliked by other students for being liberal and secular and not following a religious code of life and not attending Friday prayers," the official said.

Last month Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif ordered blasphemous content be removed from social media, and perpetrators punished.

The Interior Ministry also threatened to block all social media websites with blasphemous content, and said Facebook was sending a delegation to Pakistan to discuss their concerns, although Facebook would not confirm that to AFP.

Rights groups have long criticised Pakistan's colonial-era blasphemy legislation as a vehicle for personal vendettas.

At least 65 people have been murdered by vigilantes over blasphemy allegations since 1990, according to recent think tank report issued before Thursday's killing.

Activists have also accused religious conservatives of using blasphemy as a means of muzzling dissent.

Hundreds of Pakistani students beat to death a classmate known for his liberal views on a university campus in the country’s conservative northwest Thursday, police and witnesses 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 Mardan, sources at the university said.

Graphic video footage from the scene shows dozens of men outside the hostel kicking and hurling projectiles at a body sprawled on the ground.

The killing comes as Pakistani authorities including Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan have been increasingly vocal over blasphemy in recent weeks.

Blasphemy is a hugely sensitive charge in the conservative Muslim country, and can carry the death penalty. Even unproven allegations can cause mob lynchings and violence.

“The student has been brutally murdered by his fellow students,” Niaz Saeed, a senior police official, told AFP.

“He was badly tortured after being shot at a close range… He was beaten with sticks, bricks and hands,” Saeed said, adding that hundreds of people had been involved in the attack.

At least 11 students have been arrested so far, police said, and the university was closed indefinitely, with the campus largely deserted late Thursday evening.

“We are investigating the case but at this stage we cannot say anything” about the motive for the attack, Saeed said

However a police source told AFP that students had recently complained to university authorities about Khan’s alleged secular views.

Blood stains are seen on a wall and the ground at a hostel at Abdul Wali Khan university at the site...

Blood stains are seen on a wall and the ground at a hostel at Abdul Wali Khan university at the site of where students beat to death a classmate in Mardan on April 13, 2017
ABDUL MAJEED, AFP

The source said Khan and two friends had been in a debate with other students earlier Thursday about his religious views which became so heated that teachers had to lock him in a room for his safety.

“But the enraged students grew to a mob and they attacked the room,” the source said.

A university official who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed teachers had been forced to intervene in the debate “in a bid to save him and his two other friends, but the mob of students attacked the room and tortured and killed him”.

Khan was “disliked by other students for being liberal and secular and not following a religious code of life and not attending Friday prayers,” the official said.

Last month Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif ordered blasphemous content be removed from social media, and perpetrators punished.

The Interior Ministry also threatened to block all social media websites with blasphemous content, and said Facebook was sending a delegation to Pakistan to discuss their concerns, although Facebook would not confirm that to AFP.

Rights groups have long criticised Pakistan’s colonial-era blasphemy legislation as a vehicle for personal vendettas.

At least 65 people have been murdered by vigilantes over blasphemy allegations since 1990, according to recent think tank report issued before Thursday’s killing.

Activists have also accused religious conservatives of using blasphemy as a means of muzzling dissent.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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