Pastor Arrested, Five Christian Families Evicted over Blasphemy Accusation

By ECLJ1351705720990

A Pakistani Christian pastor has been arrested, and his extended family threatened, because he expressed his faith.  The ECLJ's international affiliate is taking action, offering legal representation to these brave Christians.

Fifty-five-year old Pastor Karman Patras, a resident of Sangla Hill, Pakistan, was arrested on October 13 for allegedly speaking out against the Islamic ritual of sacrifice. After Patras’ arrest, his five married sons, and their families, were ordered to leave their village. While Patras is languishing in prison, these five families are searching for shelter and food. A legal team from the Center for Law and Justice (CLJ), an affiliate of the European Centre for Law and Justice, visited Patras’ village and discovered the following facts.

The police have charged Patras under Section 295-A of the Pakistan Penal Code that criminalizes “outraging religious feelings.” The police sent Patras to the Sheikhupura District Jail after conducting an investigation. On October 30, he appeared before a magistrate to request that bail be set. After hearing his bail plea, the magistrate refused the plea. The police are expected to submit their investigation report before the magisterial court within days and then the trial will commence. In Pakistan, a trial can go on for years, and even then, lower courts do not decide blasphemy cases on the merits out of fear of reprisal from religious groups. At the same time, courts refuse to grant bail to those accused of blasphemy, which in turn, causes the accused to spend years in prison.

Here is what landed this Christian pastor in jail.

On October 13, Patras was invited to address a funeral gathering in the nearby village of Mehmandwali, Chak 111-R-B. Patras addressed the gathering at the bereaved family’s house by sharing Jesus Christ’s sacrificial death and resurrection. Patras did not know that there were some Muslims sitting in the gathering. Patras’ message, the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ, which is different from the Islamic view of eternal death and hope, caused great anger among these Muslims. They fiercely objected to Patras’ sermon and even tried to attack him. However, there were many Christians present who were able to keep the situation under control.

That same day, after Patras returned home to his village (Badomali, Chak no. 113), some Muslims from the adjacent village, Mehmandwali, began calling his cell phone and asking him to meet them in their village. Patras gathered a few Christians from his village to accompany him, but before they could set off for Mehmandwali, the police arrived and arrested Patras. After the arrest, a mob of Muslim men surrounded the police station and demanded that the police hand over Patras to them, but he had already been transferred to another location at that point.

After Patras’ arrest, local Muslims told his five sons to leave the village or else they would be set on fire. The Christian community in the village, which consists of about twenty families, wept for the evicted families as they loaded their belongings onto tractor trolleys. Since leaving the village, these families are without shelter and food. CLJ has offered to provide legal assistance to these Christians. We will update you on any development.

Cookies & Privacy

There is no advertising for any third party on our website. We merely use cookies to improve your navigation experience (technical cookies) and to allow us to analyze the way you consult our websites in order to improve it (analytics cookies). The personal information that may be requested on some pages of our website (subscribing to our Newsletter, signing a petition,  making a donation...) is optional. We do not share any of this information we may collect with third parties. You can check here for our privacy & security policy for more information.

I refuse analytics cookies