Government should not be blamed for the lynching in Sialkot, Emotional mob hard to control: Defence minister

Defending the government from the lynching of Sri Lankan man’s case Defence Minister of Pakistan said that, it will be wrong to connect the totally different incidents together. The lynching of the Sri Lankan man is nothing to do with the removal of Tehreek-i-Labbaik Paksiatn (TLP) ban.

The minister’s remarks come amid countrywide outrage after a mob comprising hundreds of protestors tortured to death Sri Lankan factory manager Priyantha Kumara over blasphemy allegations and then burnt his body on Friday.

The TLP was linked to the gory incident by users on social media, but the group distanced itself from the lynching and condemned it.

At a media talk in Peshawar on Sunday, a reporter said that the Sialkot killing had taken place after the government lifted the ban on the TLP, and asked Khattak whether the government was considering an “effective crackdown” against such groups to prevent similar incidents in the future.

Responding to him, the minister said the two issues shouldn’t be linked.

“You know the reasons [behind this incident] too. When children … grow up, they become spirited and do things out of emotions. This does not mean ‘this was the result of that action’,” he stressed, saying in Sialkot too some young men had gathered and accused Kumara of disrespecting Islam, which led to the “sudden” lynching.

Khattak said he too could do something wrong in a state of heightened emotions, and added that such incidents did not mean “Pakistan is going towards destruction.”

Countering, the reporter asked the minister whether he was attributing the murders of nine policemen allegedly by TLP protesters as well as that of Kumara to “emotions”.

Khattak stuck to his argument, saying boys entering adulthood are “ready to do anything” and learn with age how to control their emotions. “So this happens among kids, fights take place and even murders. [Does] this mean it is the government’s fault?”

The minister then shifted the blame onto the media, saying it “puts the onus for everything on the government”.

“Why don’t you change this mindset? Your anchors should come on TV and make the children understand their religion. You only take advertisements and earn money,” he added.

The TLP and the federal government had reached an agreement on October 31 after many rounds of talks and two weeks of clashes which left seven policemen and a number of TLP workers dead. The agreement was kept secret, but leaked information suggested consensus on removing the party from the list of banned organisations, release of TLP chief Saad Hussain Rizvi and setting TLP workers free that were held under various charges including anti-terrorism.

A week later, on November 7, the federal cabinet decided to revoke the declaration putting the TLP on the list of “proscribed” organisations under the country’s anti-terrorism law.

The defence minister’s comments stand in contrast to the views expressed by another key member of Prime Minister Imran Khan’s cabinet, Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry, who appeared to criticise his government’s handling of the crisis that emerged from the violent TLP protests in Punjab in October.

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