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A Muslim mob in Jhelum,
Pakistan murdered the wife and four children of a
Christian last month, but local authorities are too
afraid of the local Muslim leader to file charges,
according to area Muslim and Christian sources.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
(Compass Direct News) – A Muslim mob in Jhelum,
Pakistan murdered the wife and four children of a
Christian last month, but local authorities are too
afraid of the local Muslim leader
to file charges,
according to area Muslim and Christian sources.
Jamshed Masih, a police officer who was transferred 50
kilometers (31 miles) from Gujrat to Jhelum, Punjab
Province, said a mob led by Muslim religious leader
Maulana Mahfooz Khan killed his family on June 21 after
Khan called him to the local mosque and told him to
leave the predominantly Muslim colony. Jhelum is 85
kilometers (53 miles) south of Islamabad.
“You must leave with your family, no non-Muslim has ever
been allowed to live in this colony – we want to keep
our colony safe from scum,” Khan told Masih, the
bereaved Christian told Compass.
Masih had moved to Mustafa Colony in Jhelum with his
wife, two sons and two daughters and were living in a
rented house. Masih said that a Muslim neighbor, Ali
Murtaza, told him that area Muslims notified Khan,
telling the religious leader, “We cannot allow these
non-Muslims to live here, they will be a bad influence
on our children.”
An anxious Masih told his wife Razia Jamshed about the
local Muslim response, and they decided to bring their
concern to the pastor of a local Presbyterian Church,
Saleem Mall.
“Pastor Saleem said, ‘I will also advise you to vacate
the house, as it can be dangerous living there – these
people can harm your family,” Masih said.
Masih’s neighbor, Murtaza, confirmed to Compass the
response of the local Muslims and related incidents that
led up to the murders. Murtaza told Compass that after
Masih went to work at 7 a.m. on June 21, his children
could be heard singing hymns before breakfast.
“Razia sent their eldest son to buy a packet of Surf
[detergent], and he was singing a hymn on his way to buy
the Surf,” Murtaza said.
Neighbors saw Masih’s s 11-year-old son come into the
store, he said. The shopkeeper asked him if he was a
Christian; the child responded that he was.
“The shopkeeper refused to give him the packet of Surf
and spoke very harshly to him, ‘I don’t sell to any
non-Muslim, you are not welcome here, don’t you dare
ever come to my shop again,’” Murtaza said.
The boy went home, upset, and told his mother about the
encounter; she grew worried and called her husband,
saying, “Jamshed, please come home quickly, the kids and
I are very worried, we must leave this house today,”
Masih said.
His neighbor, Murtaza, said that shortly afterward some
area residents came to the door with the Muslim
religious leader, Khan.
“Your son has committed blasphemy against Muhammad, our
beloved prophet – we can’t allow him to live, he should
be punished,” Khan told Razia Masih, Murtaza said.
“Razia got scared and said, ‘My son couldn’t do such a
thing, he is only 11 years old.’”
Khan became furious and said, “Are we lying to you? You
call us liars, how dare you insult us,” Murtaza said.
“Someone from the crowd hit something hard on her head,
and she started bleeding. The children started crying
and shouted for help. Razia kept shouting for help,
‘Please have mercy on us, please let my husband come,
then we can talk.’”
Jamshed Masih said his daughter telephoned police as the
mob attacked his wife and children. He said he later
learned that “the people kept shouting, ‘This family has
committed blasphemy, they should be killed.”
Before police arrived, his family was murdered, he said.
Murtaza said Masih rushed home and was devastated to
find the dead bodies of his wife and four children.
When Masih tried to file a complaint against Khan for
the murder, Station House Officer (SHO) Ramzan Mumtaz
refused to do so, according to Murtaza and Mall, the
Presbyterian clergyman.
“He said, ‘Khan is an influential man, and he said your
son has committed blasphemy – we cannot do anything
against him,’” Mall said.
Murtaza added, “The SHO just said, ‘I am a poor man, I
have a family, and I was pressured by higher authorities
not to register the FIR [First Information Report] as
Khan is a very influential man. I am sorry, I don’t have
anything in my hands.’”
Contacted by Compass, SHO Mumtaz confirmed that he
responded to the request to file the complaint against
Khan in these exact words.
Masih has filed a complaint with the chief minister of
Punjab Province begging him for justice, Mall told
Compass.
“We condemn this brutal murder of innocent children in
the name of Islam,” Mall said. “This has to stop now. We
appeal to the government to let us live in peace.”
Compass Direct News, John Little
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