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Uneasy calm in Pakistani city after weekend of sectarian violence

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Officials in a Pakistani city hit by sectarian riots called a meeting of religious clerics Sunday to defuse tensions as scores of Ahmadi Muslims reportedly fled after a weekend of violence.

The unrest began Friday when an angry mob in the eastern city of Jhelum torched a factory after one of its employees, a member of the persecuted Ahmadi sect, was accused of committing blasphemy by burning pages of the Koran.

On Saturday, protesters ransacked an Ahmadi mosque in the congested Kala Gujran area of the city and set fire to some Ahmadi homes.

Ahmadis are legally declared 'non-Muslims' in Pakistan and frequently persecuted because they believe in a final prophet after Muhammad.

"We have called the local clerics and traders and they have agreed to help restore peace because they are convinced that violence is not Islamic," Zulfiqar Ahmad Ghumman, chief of the district administration, told AFP.

Policemen stand guard in front of an Ahmadi mosque in Jhelum on November 22  2015
Policemen stand guard in front of an Ahmadi mosque in Jhelum on November 22, 2015
Farooq Naeem, AFP

He added that authorities would hunt down those responsible for the violence.

Tensions remained high Sunday as police, paramilitary rangers and soldiers patrolled the city to keep it calm.

"Around 18 Ahmadi families live in this neighbourhood. They had already left their homes for protection even before the mob attacked their worship place here," said Chaudhry Muhammad Asif, a local councillor in Kala Gujran.

Resident Najabat Butt blamed police for not doing enough to quell the rioters when the Ahmadi mosque was ransacked.

"I saw hundreds of protesters gathered here and trying to attack the Ahmadis' worship place.

"Police were already present there and tried to disperse them by using tear gas and firing into the air, but the protesters hit back and pelted stones forcing them to run away," he said.

Blasphemy is a hugely sensitive issue in Pakistan, an Islamic republic of some 200 million, where even unproven allegations frequently stir mob violence and lynchings.

Eleven Ahmadis were murdered for their faith in 2014 and authorities have failed to apprehend any of the killers, highlighting growing intolerance toward the sect.

Officials in a Pakistani city hit by sectarian riots called a meeting of religious clerics Sunday to defuse tensions as scores of Ahmadi Muslims reportedly fled after a weekend of violence.

The unrest began Friday when an angry mob in the eastern city of Jhelum torched a factory after one of its employees, a member of the persecuted Ahmadi sect, was accused of committing blasphemy by burning pages of the Koran.

On Saturday, protesters ransacked an Ahmadi mosque in the congested Kala Gujran area of the city and set fire to some Ahmadi homes.

Ahmadis are legally declared ‘non-Muslims’ in Pakistan and frequently persecuted because they believe in a final prophet after Muhammad.

“We have called the local clerics and traders and they have agreed to help restore peace because they are convinced that violence is not Islamic,” Zulfiqar Ahmad Ghumman, chief of the district administration, told AFP.

Policemen stand guard in front of an Ahmadi mosque in Jhelum on November 22  2015

Policemen stand guard in front of an Ahmadi mosque in Jhelum on November 22, 2015
Farooq Naeem, AFP

He added that authorities would hunt down those responsible for the violence.

Tensions remained high Sunday as police, paramilitary rangers and soldiers patrolled the city to keep it calm.

“Around 18 Ahmadi families live in this neighbourhood. They had already left their homes for protection even before the mob attacked their worship place here,” said Chaudhry Muhammad Asif, a local councillor in Kala Gujran.

Resident Najabat Butt blamed police for not doing enough to quell the rioters when the Ahmadi mosque was ransacked.

“I saw hundreds of protesters gathered here and trying to attack the Ahmadis’ worship place.

“Police were already present there and tried to disperse them by using tear gas and firing into the air, but the protesters hit back and pelted stones forcing them to run away,” he said.

Blasphemy is a hugely sensitive issue in Pakistan, an Islamic republic of some 200 million, where even unproven allegations frequently stir mob violence and lynchings.

Eleven Ahmadis were murdered for their faith in 2014 and authorities have failed to apprehend any of the killers, highlighting growing intolerance toward the sect.

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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