No blasphemy evidence found against five bloggers, court told
islamabad — Five activists who made international headlines when they went missing earlier this year were cleared of blasphemy charges on Friday, a lawyer said.
The men, who used social media to stand against religious intolerance and at times criticised the powerful military, vanished within days of each other in January, sparking fears of a state crackdown.
Four of them have since been released, with some accusing their captors of torture. No group claimed responsibility for their abduction, and the government and military have denied involvement.
But during their disappearance, a virulent social media campaign to paint them as blasphemers began, triggering a flood of threats.
Blasphemy is a criminal offence in Pakistan and can carry the death penalty, though the state has never executed someone convicted of it.
On Friday, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) told the Islamabad High Court it could find no evidence against the five men.
“The FIA officials told the court it ... seems the five bloggers were not involved in blasphemy,” Tariq Asad, one of the lawyers bringing the charge against the activists, said. “The judge remarked that no innocent person should be implicated in a false case of blasphemy,” Asad said.
The campaign against the missing men spotlighted how extremist efforts to muzzle liberal voices using Pakistan’s strict laws have found a powerful new platform online, rights activists say.
Ahmad Waqass Goraya, one of the activists who was released and lives in the Netherlands, said the court should now investigate why Pakistan’s mainstream media repeated the dangerous claims against him without proof.
He has previously accused the security establishment of abducting and torturing him, and said Friday’s ruling “has at least questioned the full impunity that the agencies enjoy”. —