The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pakistan interior minister recovering after gun attack

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LAHORE, Pakistan: Pakistan’s interior minister was recovering in hospital yesterday after being shot in a suspected assassinat­ion attempt possibly linked to blasphemy, with the attack seen as an ominous sign for security ahead of nationwide elections.

Ahsan Iqbal, 59, was shot in the right arm as he prepared to leave a public meeting in his constituen­cy in Punjab province late Sunday.

A man identified by police only as “Abid” and said to be in his early 20s was wrestled to the ground by officers and bystanders as he was preparing to fire a second shot. He has been taken into custody.

Police are still investigat­ing the attack, but local deputy commission­er Ali Anan Qamar told AFP that the shooter said he was inspired by a controvers­y last year in which a small amendment to the oath that election candidates must swear had to be hastily reversed after it was linked to blasphemy.

The row sparked a three-week sitin last November by a previously little-known Islamist group, which paralysed the capital.

That demonstrat­ion ended when the government capitulate­d to the protesters’ demands -- including the ousting of the federal law minister -- in a deal brokered by the military.

At the time many Pakistanis and analysts warned that a dangerous precedent had been set in which fringe groups could bend the state to their will by citing blasphemy, a highly inflammato­ry charge in the conservati­ve Muslim country.

Iqbal, a champion of Pakistan’s much-persecuted religious minorities, pushed for a negotiated settlement to the controvers­y. He has previously condemned hate speech against groups such as the Ahmadis, an Islamic minority sect who were at the centre of the dispute.

After the shooting he was rushed first to a local hospital and then airlifted to Lahore, where video footage released by his ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party (PML-N) showed him being lowered from a helicopter on a stretcher, his eyes open as he responded to questions.

Doctors performed surgery on him until the early hours, Shafqat Waseem Chaudhry, one of the fivemember medical team responsibl­e for him, told AFP.

“He is stable now. But he will remain in the (intensive care unit) for two days,” he said.

The attack was swiftly condemned by the internatio­nal community as Pakistanis voiced fears it represente­d an attempt to weaken democracy ahead of the federal elections, widely expected to be held late this summer.

Ziauddin Yousafzai, the father of Pakistani Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai, tweeted that he ‘strongly condemned’ the attack, calling it a ‘bad omen for upcoming general elections that is supposed to be free, fair and transparen­t’.

Security analyst Amir Rana told AFP the shooting of the minister nominally in charge of security in a country that has long grappled with militancy was a ‘serious’ developmen­t.

“Pakistan claims that the country has returned to normalcy but such attacks continues to happen and these are downplayed,” he said.

The vote will only be Pakistan’s second-ever democratic transition, and with the PML-N in disarray since Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was ousted by the Supreme Court over graft allegation­s last summer, there has been growing speculatio­n it could be delayed.

The court banned Sharif from politics for life, while foreign minister Khawaja Asif was also ousted by the Islamabad High Court late last month for violating election laws.

Sharif and his supporters have repeatedly denied the allegation­s, suggesting they are victims of a conspiracy driven by Pakistan’s powerful military to reduce the sway of their party.

Despite the setbacks, the party has won a string of recent byelection­s, proving it will likely remain a force in the vote.

Blasphemy can be punishable by death under controvers­ial Pakistani legislatio­n, with even unproven allegation­s sparking mob lynchings and murders.

He is stable now. But he will remain in the (intensive care unit) for two days. Shafqat Waseem Chaudhry, medical team member

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Iqbal (centre) is evacuated from a helicopter on their arrival in Lahore.
— AFP photo Iqbal (centre) is evacuated from a helicopter on their arrival in Lahore.

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