Home Latest News Madrassah Student, Teacher Accused of Blasphemy

Madrassah Student, Teacher Accused of Blasphemy

by AFP
File Photo. Munir uz Zaman—AFP

File Photo. Munir uz Zaman—AFP

Police claim student was caught burning pages of the Quran, claiming his teacher had told him this was the correct way to dispose of old Qurans.

A teenager and his religious teacher have been accused of blasphemy, police told AFP on Friday, after the student was allegedly caught burning pages of the Quran.

The teenager, a student at a madrassah in Kasur district of Punjab province, was spotted by residents burning the pages of the Islamic holy book, said local senior police official Miraz Arif Rasheed. When asked what he was doing, he said his teacher had told him that burning was the correct way to dispose of old Qurans.

Islam’s holy text is believed by Muslims to be the word of God spoken through Islam’s Prophet directly to mankind. For that reason the words themselves are held sacred, meaning Muslims must dispose of their old Qurans with great respect.

Religious scholars approve of two ways: by wrapping the book carefully in a cloth and burying it in the ground, or placing it in flowing water so the ink is washed away from the pages. Any disrespect to the Quran is punishable with life imprisonment under the Muslim country’s controversial blasphemy laws.

Such disrespect could also spark mob violence: an angry mob torched a factory in Punjab province in November 2015 after one of its employees was accused of burning pages from the Quran in the boiler. “Both the student and [teacher] have been booked under the blasphemy law section 295B, which contains life imprisonment as the only punishment,” Rasheed said.

The case emerged one day after the Supreme Court delayed an appeal against the death sentence meted out to Christian Asia Bibi in 2010 for blasphemy. Bibi was accused of insulting Islam’s Prophet, punishable by death under the blasphemy laws, in a notorious case that has seen rights groups and the Vatican call for her release.

Her final court appeal was due to be held Thursday in Islamabad, but was delayed after one of the three-judge bench claimed he had a conflict of interest. No new date has been set.

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