Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
International

'Do Not Clash With The State': Imran Khan Issues Stern Warning To Agitators After Asia Bibi Verdict

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Oct, 2018 05:21 PM
    Talking tough, Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan Wednesday told hardliners not to "confront the State" and refrain from vandalism after the Supreme Court acquitted a Christian woman sentenced to death for committing blasphemy.
     
     
    Prime Minister Khan addressed the nation through a video message and his address was solely focused on the Asia Bibi verdict.
     
     
    Bibi, a 47-year-old mother of four, who was on a death row for eight years for blasphemy, was acquitted by the top court in a landmark verdict which evoked protests, death threats from hardline groups and cheers from human rights advocates.
     
     
    "I ask these elements (protestors) to avoid confronting the State. But if they opted to do so, the State will fulfill its responsibilities," Mr Khan said.
     
     
    "We will protect life and property of people...We will not let them (protestors) involve in vandalism or close down the roads," he said, referring to protestors blocking a highway linking the capital Islamabad with garrison city of Rawalpindi.
     
     
    Many parts of Karachi were paralysed due to the protests and most of the main roads were shut down by the protesters who are burning tyres and pelting stones at vehicles.
     
     
    Mr Khan appealed to the public to remain calm and refrain from joining those trying to create law and order problem in the name of Islam.
     
     
    The Prime Minister said that he was forced to give the address after the reaction by protestors against the verdict and the kind of language they were using against State institutions.
     
     
    Mr Khan also flayed a video clip of a leader of protestors on social media in which he said that the judges who gave the verdict were liable to murder.
     
     
    "How a State can function in such circumstances...Those involved in this are not doing any service to Islam. They are in fact enemies of Islam," Mr Khan said.
     
     
    Referring to the protesters who have disrupted routine life across the country, he said: "If the Supreme Court does not issue a verdict according to their wishes, will they come out on the roads?"
     
     
    The Prime Minister also said Pakistan was created in the name of Islam and no law can be made against the teachings of Islam.
     
     
    He said the verdict was issued in the light of the Constitution of the country which is also based on Islam.
     
     
    He said the government was working hard to improve the economy and the protestors were creating hurdles to get political mileage out of the verdict.
     
     
    "We are already facing such tough economic hurdles. We have yet to take a day off... we are struggling continuously to uplift the people [and] to improve the conditions of the underprivileged," he said.
     
     
    "The people are to bear the brunt of this. The labours who are reliant on daily wages... how will they survive?" he asked.
     
     
    Bibi was accused of committing blasphemy in 2009.
     
     
    She was convicted by the trial court in 2010 after being accused of insulting Islam in a row with her neighbours. Her death sentence was maintained by the Lahore High Court in 2014.
     
     
    She always maintained her innocence, but has spent most of the past eight years in solitary confinement.
     
     
    She appealed against the conviction in the Supreme Court, which for the first time heard the case in July 2015.
     
     
    Bibi was the first woman who was given death sentence under the blasphemy laws.
     
     
    According to officials, Bibi might be flown out of Pakistan due to threat to her life.
     
     
    It is not clear where she will go as several countries, including Canada, have offered asylum to her.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    WATCH: Infectious Video Shows Laughter Amid Disaster Of New Brunswick's Floods

    WATCH: Infectious Video Shows Laughter Amid Disaster Of New Brunswick's Floods
    A New Brunswick man has posted an infectious video of his elderly parents checking out the family's flooded-ravaged cottage, demonstrating there can be laughter in disaster — and after 46 years of marriage.

    WATCH: Infectious Video Shows Laughter Amid Disaster Of New Brunswick's Floods

    British Council Awards For Three Indian Alumni Of UK Universities

    British Council Awards For Three Indian Alumni Of UK Universities
    Three Indian alumni of UK universities have been awarded by the British Council for their outstanding achievements and contribution to the country.

    British Council Awards For Three Indian Alumni Of UK Universities

    Want To Educate Public About Indian Community, Says First Sikh Mayor Ravi Bhalla In US’s Hoboken

    Want To Educate Public About Indian Community, Says First Sikh Mayor Ravi Bhalla In US’s Hoboken
    Ravi Bhalla, the first ever Sikh mayor of a city in New Jersey, hopes to educate the public about the Indian and South Asian community and the rights of all Americans under the Constitution.

    Want To Educate Public About Indian Community, Says First Sikh Mayor Ravi Bhalla In US’s Hoboken

    US Apologises After Canadian Minister Navdeep Bains Told To Remove Turban At Detroit Metro Airport

    US Apologises After Canadian Minister Navdeep Bains Told To Remove Turban At Detroit Metro Airport
    US security officials have apologised after a Sikh minister of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Cabinet was asked to remove his turban at a US airport before boarding a flight last year.

    US Apologises After Canadian Minister Navdeep Bains Told To Remove Turban At Detroit Metro Airport

    5 Kashmiris, Including Women, Beaten By Mob In Delhi Colony, Residents Say They Started It

    5 Kashmiris, Including Women, Beaten By Mob In Delhi Colony, Residents Say They Started It
    Four women and a youth hailing from Kashmir complained of assault by a mob of around 40 persons over a petty issue in the national capital, following which an FIR was lodged on Friday, police said.

    5 Kashmiris, Including Women, Beaten By Mob In Delhi Colony, Residents Say They Started It

    Indigo, Air Deccan Planes, 700 Metres Apart, Avert Mid-air Collision Over Dhaka

    A mid-air mishap was averted in the Dhaka airspace after an automatically generated warning alerted the pilots of IndiGo and Air Deccan planes, which came dangerously close to each other, allegedly breaching the mandatory separation limit, sources said.

    Indigo, Air Deccan Planes, 700 Metres Apart, Avert Mid-air Collision Over Dhaka