Pak Blasphemy Report2018 PDF
Pak Blasphemy Report2018 PDF
Pak Blasphemy Report2018 PDF
com
THE UNTOLD
TRUTH OF
PAKISTAN'S
BLASPHEMY LAW
Research Director:
Arafat Mazhar
On the 31st of October, 2018, the Supreme Court of Pakistan acquitted Asia Bibi, a Christian woman
who had been sentenced to death under section 295-C of the Pakistan Penal Code in 2009. She was acquitted
on the grounds that the prosecution failed to meet evidentiary requirements. As a direct consequence, the
leadership of the extremist Islamist party Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) announced a nationwide protest.
As of this release, the protest is ongoing, halting the lives of ordinary citizens, and becoming increasingly
violent with reports of damage to property and harm to persons. This judgement and the controversy
surrounding it has made it very clear that Pakistan needs to engage with the history and substance of its
blasphemy laws, specifically section 295-C, in order to bring about a more equitable and, vitally, a more just
state of affairs. This is essential not only for minorities living in Pakistan who are made disproportionate targets
of these laws. It is also vital for the wide spectrum of academics, policy makers, lawyers and activists who
operate on the ground and are victimized as a result of the constructed narrative and weaponization of the
concept of blasphemy.
This comprehensive report on Pakistan's blasphemy laws traces their history, including their colonial
heritage, engages in an immanent critique of those laws drawing on the Islamic legal tradition and offers policy
recommendations on how to move forward. The report also includes canonical texts of Islamic jurisprudence
and their translations in order to challenge the notion that there is an absolute consensus among the schools of
Islamic jurisprudence on the issue of blasphemy and what the punishment for blasphemy should be.
This report has been three years in the making. The research for this report was done by scholars
proficient in Arabic, Islamic jurisprudence, as well as historians, legal experts, and Madrassah students. The
research for this report included consulting the primary Arabic texts referenced, their Urdu translations that are
available in Madrassahs in Pakistan, the notes of actual parliamentary proceedings, judgements from Pakistani
courts as well as the laws and opinions of scholars from various Muslim majority countries. Throughout this
process, many established Islamic scholars, madrassah students and graduates, imams, and muftis--most of
whom did not wish to be named for fear of repercussion-- were consulted. We are wholly confident that our
research and the story it tells is accurate.
At its core, this report is about truths which have been repressed and deliberately erased to pass and
support a law that has been responsible for the deaths of many, many innocent Pakistani citizens whilst
empowering and emboldening violent, extremist elements in the country. It is time that our legislators and
religious authorities account for the findings of this report. The only way to move forward is to reconcile with the
realities of the past.
Arafat Mazhar
Director, Engage
Table of Contents
1 I Introduction
a. Statistics - Impact of the Law
b. Framework
i. Human Rights Approach
ii. Failure of Human Rights
Approach
iii. Reformist Scholarship
iv. Failure of Reformist
Scholarship
v. Exceptional Scholars
vi. Beyond Human Rights
and Modern Scholarship
c. Background and Overview of the Crisis
d. Objectives of this Report
5I Hanafi Jurisprudence
a. List of Hanafi Jurists and their Position on Blasphemy
b. Jurists and Figures Critical to the South Asian Region
6I Misrepresentation
a. Ismail Qureshi
b. Sajid Awan
c. Fatawa Binori Town
d. Ashrcf-ul-Oodri
e. Jamia Binoria
f. Hanif Qureshi
g. Claims of ljma on Television Shows
h. Miscellaneous Examples
i. Patterns of Misrepresentation
j. Interviews
k. Maslaha - A License to Hide the Truth?
a. Shafi'i
b. Hanbali
c. Maliki
11 I Appendix
•Introduction
Section 295-C of the Pakistan Penal Code is arguably one of the most contentious pieces of
legislation in Pakistan today. It falls within the section on "offences relating to religion" and deals
specifically with the crime of "blasphemy" against the figurehead of the Prophet Muhammad.
The law, declared by the courts as a divine decree, prescribes a fixed and unpardonable death
penalty against the crime of blasphemy. The option of life imprisonment was made defunct after
a 1991 Federal Shariat Court judgment.
It is alleged that its status as 'God's law' makes the blasphemy law a highly potent weapon in
pursuing enmities and persecuting minorities, and the evidence certainly bears out this view. The
following table summarizes the extent to which the law has impacted Pakistani society.
SOURCE DATA
From 1851to1947, when the British ruled this region, there were
only seven blasphemy-related incidents but during Zia's rule
along (1977-1988) alone, as many as 80 blasphemy cases were
reported to the courts.