Muslim Death Threats Protested

Muslim extremists have urged followers to murder several Pakistani Christians and legal reformers who have been haphazardly accused of blaspheming Muhammad.

“The current blasphemy law is just a license to wipe Christianity from Pakistan,” says Manny Alam, president of the Philadelphia-based Pakistan-American Christian Association.

On top of the hit list is Pakistan’s Minister of Law, Iqbal Haider, who has been reviled for recently proposing revisions in the country’s blasphemy laws, which many say have been widely abused. A Muslim cleric has placed a $40,000 price tag on Haider’s head and promised that whoever kills Haider will be considered an Islamic martyr.

The death penalty has been in force in Pakistan since 1991 for anyone convicted of blaspheming Muhammad.

Christians, however, including top officials such as Haider, say the law has been abused by some radical Muslims due to business or political rivalties.

“We are being persecuted by law,” says John Alexander Malik, a Pakistani Anglican bishop. He calls the blasphemy laws “religious cleansing.”

The Pakistani Human Rights Commission has produced an investigative report indicating that hundreds of Christians and moderate Muslims have been falsely accused.

On April 5, Muslim extremists attacked two men, one a Presbyterian, awaiting trial on accusations of blasphemy; they killed a third man. That prompted the Pakistani Christian community to begin its active campaign to repeal the blasphemy laws.

Haider and Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto want to amend the laws to require blasphemy charges to be filed in the courts rather than with police, and to inflict a ten-year prison sentence on anyone proven to accuse another of blasphemy falsely.

So far, 18 cases are known to have been filed against Christians.

Copyright © 1994 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Reaching the First Post-Christian Generation: Baby Busters make new demands on the church

Cover Story

Reaching the First Post-Christian Generation

Andres Tapia

Randall Terry Attacks Religious Right

Joe Maxwell in Jackson

Christians Aid Forgotten Guyanese Poor

John W. Kennedy

Christians Suffer Renewed Attacks

Protesters Offer Silent Witness in Haiti

Florida Shootings Stifle Pro-lifers

John W. Kennedy

Science Finds Religion at Symposium

Jo Kadlecek

NORTH AMERICAN SCENE: Fragrance-free Service Initiated

New Catechism a Bestseller

Christians Decry Rights Bill

Urban Relocators Build Bridges

Andres Tapia

Jews for Jesus Fights Cult Label

City Erects Pagan Sculpture

Mark A. Kellner

Has Rift Between Orthodox, Protestants Begun to Heal?

Thomas S. Giles in Moscow

Group Picks First American Leader

Mark A. Kellner

Churches Challenge Synod Ruling

Joe Maxwell

BOOKS: Rating Our Theologians

SIDEBAR: Worth Mentioning: News, notices, and curiosities of religious publishing

John Wilson

PHILIP YANCEY: What Surprised Jesus

Christians Suffer Renewed Attacks

News

FEC Targets Political Ad

News

News Briefs: September 12, 1994

News

Closing the Ultimate Sale

Steve Rabey

News

Media Campaign Targets Unchurched

By Patricia C. Roberts

Talking 'Bout a Generation

Michael Maudlin

In Praise of Premise Keepers

EUTYCHUS

The Unrepeatable Tom Skinner

James Earl Massey

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Blinded by the ’Lite’

Thomas C. Oden

Editorial

EDITORIAL: AIDS Policy Failure

Rich Cizik, policy analyst for National Association of Evangelicals Washington office

News

Hard-Core Porn Technology Hits Home

John Zipperer

SIDEBAR: Busters Online

Helen Lee, lee90@aol.com

SIDEBAR: X-ing the Church

Andres Tapia

ARTICLE: Testing the Spiritualities

Jame R. Edwards

ARTICLE: Charting Dispensationalism

Darrell L. Bock

SIDEBAR: Dispensationalisms of the Third Kind

Walter A. Elwell, Wheaton College, reviewer

ARTICLE: Clocking Out

ARTICLE: Who’s Afraid of the Holy Spirit?

Daniel B. Wallace, Dallas Theological Seminary

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from September 12, 1994

View issue

Our Latest

A Christmas Conspiracy for Zoomer Men

They’re not wrong to believe in a contested world. But they’ve misidentified the villains.

The Bulletin

Social Media Bans, Hep-B Vaccine, Notre Dame Snubbed, and the 1939 Project

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll

Australia bans social media for kids, CDC’s recommendations change, college football uproar, and the far right lens on history.

The Russell Moore Show

What Makes a Song Good for Corporate Worship?

Russell takes a listener question about whether some songs are better than others for worshipping in a congregational setting.

Being Human

Finding Peace in the Chaos: Five Emotional Well-Being Tips for Christmas

How can you maintain your Christmas sanity amid holiday stress?

Christ Welcomes Us So That We Might Welcome Him

Oghosa Iyamu

The Incarnation is an act of divine hospitality, and the church is the cohost.

News

A Year After Assad, Evangelicals Help Syria Heal

Heather M. Surls

While uncertain about life under the new Islamist-led government, Christians are providing spiritual and material aid to their neighbors

News

Nigerian Parents Pray for Children’s Return After Mass Kidnapping

Emmaneul Nwachukwu

“I just wish someone can help me get my child back home soon.”

Lord Over LinkedIn

Jacob Zerkle

As layoffs mount amid economic uncertainty, lots of us are looking for work. Here’s how to approach the process.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube