
Around 100 graves belonging to Ahmadis desecrated in Pakistan
Around 100 Ahmadi graves were desecrated in Punjab, Pakistan. This brings the total to over 250 this year. The Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan is suspected of the vandalism. The police have started an investigation. Ahmadi community members reported the incident. They accused the TLP of inciting violence. They also alleged police pressured them to demolish the graves themselves.
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Around 100 graves belonging to the minority Ahmadi community of Pakistan have been desecrated in Punjab province, police said on Thursday. This latest incidents take the number of Ahmadi graves desecrated to over 250 in this year across the country.Radical Islamist party, Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), is suspected of demolishing the gravestones of Ahmadi graves two days ago in Khushab district, some 250 kms from Lahore, Jamaat-e-Ahmadiyya Pakistan spokesperson Aamir Mahmood said.The Mithha Tuwana police station in the Khushab district has launched investigation into the matter on the complaint of local Ahmadis "Religious extremists demolished gravestones of around 100 Ahmadi graves in the graveyard located in Rhoda, district Khushab. When some members of the Ahmadi community visited the said graveyard, they found all the gravestones belonging to Ahmadi graves desecrated."It is noteworthy that some individuals affiliated with the Tehreek-e-Labbaik, Pakistan (TLP) were involved in spreading hatred and inciting violence against the local Ahmadi residents," Mahmood said.He also accused some police officials of pressuring the local Ahmadis for some time to demolish these gravestones themselves. "However, the Ahmadi community clearly informed the local authorities that they would not do so," he said.The local Ahmadi residents have submitted an application to the District Police Officer (DPO) Khushab for legal action against the culprits, he added.Mahmood said that in this year alone some 269 Ahmadi graves have been desecrated in 11 different cities across Pakistan. "Last year, some 319 Ahmadi graves were desecrated in 21 different areas. Such heinous acts are defaming Pakistan. It is regrettable that despite dozens of incidents of desecration of Ahmadi graves, the authorities concerned have failed to provide justice to the victims," he said and demanded that the higher authorities bring the culprits to justice according to the law.A video of a TLP cleric Maulvi Zia Mustafa Shah is also doing rounds on social media in which he is openly inciting the people against Ahmadis while calling for the destruction of the Ahmadi graves in Khushab.In Pakistan, most Ahmadi worship places have come under attack by the TLP activists or in some incidents, police - acting under the pressure of religious extremists -- demolished minarets, arches, and removed sacred writings.Although Ahmadis consider themselves Muslims, Pakistan's Parliament in 1974 declared the community as non-Muslims. A decade later, they were not just banned from calling themselves Muslims but were also barred from practising aspects of Islam.These include constructing or displaying any symbol that identifies them as Muslims such as building minarets or domes on mosques, or publicly writing verses from the Quran.However, there also is a Lahore High Court ruling that states the places of worship built prior to a particular ordinance issued in 1984 are legal and hence should not be altered or razed down.
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'He looks very similar," said al-Abbasi, who had scrolled through hundreds of photographs on Syrian orphanages' websites before finding this one. 'The nose, even the mouth." More than 112,000 Syrians arrested since the start of an uprising against Assad in 2011 remain unaccounted for, according to the Syrian Network for Human Rights. That figure is comparable to the number of people who have disappeared in Mexico's drug wars, though Syria's population is only a fifth the size. Children are often used to punish or pressure opponents in war. Russia has taken thousands of children from Ukraine. Decades after Argentina's military dictatorship ended, families are still finding missing relatives seized as newborns and adopted by military couples. Dealing with this brutal legacy is a crucial challenge for the new Syria, whose government, led by an Islamist group that cut its past ties with al Qaeda, is trying to assert its control over a country riven by sectarian tensions. 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When the uprising against Assad began, relatives urged them to leave Syria. The family had a history with the regime: Rania's father—a prominent religious scholar—had spent 13 years in prison under Assad's father, President Hafez al-Assad, because of his oppositional views. Islamists were often considered a threat by the secular Assad regime. After Rania's father was released, the family went into exile in Saudi Arabia, where Ahmed was born. But his parents wanted to raise him and his sisters where they had roots and returned to Damascus in 2009. 'She thought she was safe," said Rania's younger sister, Naila, a doctor who remained in Saudi Arabia with much of the family. Between six children and work, Rania had no time to get involved in political activity or protests, even if she supported their demands. But she did give generously to Syrians displaced by the government's crackdown. And her father, from abroad, had voiced support for the uprising. 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The Journal couldn't determine what happened to them later. 'We regret the untenable situation we found ourselves in when receiving the children and unequivocally disapprove of such practices," it said. The group said it had taken steps to ensure it didn't happen again. The organization has since filed a claim with Damascus's public prosecutor to open an official investigation into the Yaseen children's disappearance. It said there was no record they had ever been placed in SOS Children's Villages' care. The family expanded their search to other orphanages. Baraa al-Ayoubi, director of the al-Rahma orphanage in Damascus, said Syrian security agents had placed 100 children of detainees in her care over the course of the war, but none of them belonged to Rania. The orphanage was forbidden to disclose details about the children, even to their relatives, when Assad was in power, she said. Eventually, all the children were handed back to their parents, she said. 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