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HomeNewsAttack on Pakistani prisoner fuels protests

Attack on Pakistani prisoner fuels protests

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TWO HUNDRED protesters took to the streets in Muzaffarabad in Pakistan on Saturday (May 4) to demonstrate against an attack on a Pakistani prisoner in India.

The injured man – a convicted murderer named Sanaullah Ranjay – was assaulted early on Friday (May 3) in the northern city of Jammu, a day after India’s home ministry ordered stepped-up security for jailed Pakistanis.

The attack came after Indian prisoner Sarabjit Singh, convicted in Pakistan for spying and deadly bombings, died on Thursday (May 2) following a savage beating in a Lahore prison, sparking a furious response from Indian politicians.

The apparent tit-for-tat jail violence has strained relations between the neighbours.

A reporter said around 200 people marched in Muzaffarabad against the attack on Ranjay.

The crowds chanted slogans against Indiaand called for “jihad” to force Indian troops out of Kashmir.

They burned the Indian flag and demanded Ranjay should be repatriated to Pakistan. Ranjay is being treated in a hospital in the city of Chandigarh, where he remains in a critical condition on a ventilator.

Meanwhile, the Pakistani authorities announced a day of mourning to protest the attack.

“We will observed a day of mourning on Monday (May 6) and will demonstrate in front of the United Nations office to register our protest against (the) attack on Ranjay,” Chaudhary Abdul Majeed said in a statement.

“We will also stage rallies in all major cities,” he said.

Earlier, Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, head of Jamaat-ud-Dawa, a hardline Islamic organisation blamed for terrorist attacks by India, criticised India’s Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for bestowing state honours on the dead Indian prisoner.

“We are in favour of an action against those who tortured Sarabjit Singh. But there is no justification for Indian propaganda (on this issue),” he said.

Saeed said Indiashould review its own acts and should not promote terrorism in Pakistan.

“Sarabjit Singh admitted in the courts that he is responsible for the bomb blasts and that he was formally supported by Indiafor these blasts. He has taken lives of so many people,” he said.

“We don’t think that torture in jail is a right thing. Nobody should take the law in (their) hands. But there is no justification for that noise in Indiaat this moment. Indiashould correct its own acts,” he said.

Singh was cremated with state honours on Friday (May 3) in his native village in northwestern Indiawhere hundreds of angry demonstrators shouted ‘Down with Pakistan!’ as they gathered to pay their tributes.

The prison violence and resulting protests are likely to cause further friction between nuclear-armed Indiaand Pakistan, whose ties were hit by a border flare-up earlier this year that undermined efforts to build trust.

The neighbours have fought three wars over the disputed region of Kashmir.

Sarabjit Singh was convicted 16 years ago for espionage and for his alleged involvement in a string of bomb attacks in Pakistan’s Punjab province that killed 14 people in 1990.

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