Saturday, February 19, 2011

'These death threats won't make me flee', says Sherry Rehman, Pakistan's defiant prisoner of intolerance...


All Sherry Rehman wants is to go out – for a coffee, a stroll, lunch, anything. But that's not possible. Death threats flood her email inbox and mobile phone; armed police are squatted at the gate of her Karachi mansion; government ministers advise her to flee.

"I get two types of advice about leaving," says the steely politician. "One from concerned friends, the other from those who want me out so I'll stop making trouble. But I'm going nowhere." She pauses, then adds quietly: "At least for now."

It's been almost three weeks since Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer was gunned down outside an Islamabad cafe. As the country plunged into crisis, Rehman became a prisoner in her own home. Having championed the same issue that caused Taseer's death – reform of Pakistan's draconian blasphemy laws – she is, by popular consensus, next on the extremists' list. More...

Don't miss:
  1. Pakistan, blasphemy and the tale of two women with balls...
  2. Clerics salute 'brave' Pakistan killer...
  3. Pakistan: Punjab governor killed for 'opposing blasphemy laws'
  4. Ethnic cleansing of Hindus, Christians and Sikhs in Pakistan...
  5. If Pakistan is serious about freedom of speech its blasphemy law must go... 

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