You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
India-Pakistan
Gunmen kill anti-Taleban writer
2003-01-23
Police in northern Pakistan say unidentified attackers have shot dead a writer whose work was viewed as critical of fundamentalist Islam. The 40-year-old writer, Fazal Wahab, was shot at a local shop. Fatwas, or religious edicts, declaring his work un-Islamic had been issued by senior clerical figures after the publication of two books challenging the role of mullahs. Police say three or four gunmen burst into the shop in the town of Mingora, in North-West Frontier Province, where Mr Wahab was sitting. The gunmen opened fire indiscriminately, killing Mr Wahab and the shop owner on the spot. A teenage shop assistant died on his way to hospital. Police established checkpoints quickly but have so far made no arrests. Two of Mr Wahab's books were critical of the Taleban, the role of the mullahs and Osama bin Laden. It is not clear whether the fatwas called for his death.
There's another kind?
Mr Wahab, who was married with five children, called a press conference last month to say he was receiving death threats.
He was reported to have applied for a visa to the United States, with a view to seeking political asylum, but this was rejected.
Nice move, State Department
He was not well-known nationally, but locally was engaged in a hostile debate with Islamic leaders through his writings.
Which is why he's dead now
The attack will be an early test of the new government's future intentions; whether to pursue the attackers or allow the killings to go unpunished. The latter would send a strong message to clerical leaders that they have broad freedom to operate as they wish.
I'm not hopeful they'll do anything real.
Posted by:Steve

#1  I was very touched by the article about the Pakistani writer's murder in the NWFP in this morning's rantburg. This guy may have been a bit foolish risking his life, but look at his situation. He knew that the Taliban and the Islamic clerics were wrong, he was denied asylum in the US, probably couldn't go to Euro-land. He had no out for him and his family. But he did not shut up. He is a true martyr for what is decent and right about humanity. There are decent people in Pakistan, but they are down at least one today. They should be ashamed, and so should we.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2003-01-23 15:23:04  

00:00