Chairman Mutthida Ulema Board Punjab Hafiz Muhammad Tahir Mehmood Ashrafi has said that writing a letter against the blasphemy law to the United Nations (UN) by the PTI leader Shireen Mazari is an attempt to invite foreign intervention in the national and Islamic affairs of the country. Addressing a press conference in Lahore on Thursday, he said that campaign against the sacred law at international level was not acceptable at any cost. He urged the PTI chairman Imran Khan to ask his party leader to surrender this letter from the UN. He said that Mazari instead of writing her reservations to Islamic Ideology Council or any court, wrote a letter to the UN for intervention in the country’s internal matters. Ashrafi said that the incident would especially discussed in Jumma sermons on Friday. He said that the PTI chairman should openly condemned the incident as he often talked about sanctity of the Holy Prophet (PBUH). Ashrafi said that he personally discussed with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif that no blasphemy case should be made against the politicians on personal or political differences. He cleared that the action would only be taken against those who were found directly involved in the incident. He appealed the nation to work against the hatred on the political differences and sit together with each other.
متعلقہ مضامین
-
30,847 tickets issued over serious violations
-
Marriyum calls for end to process of disseminating baseless, concocted news
-
Federal cabinet to discuss seven-point agenda with PM Shahbaz
-
Nawaz Sharif ECL case adjourned as judge goes on leave
-
7,918 cases registered against kite flying, aerial firing in Punjab
-
CPNE hopes new PIO will resolve newspapers’ issues
-
IHC fixes PTI’s appeal in foreign funding case for hearing
-
HHRD distributes Rs50m food packages among orphans
-
UBL’s strong momentum continues in 2022
-
PMA appeals to authorities to repeal PMC Act
-
Why would anybody conspire against you: Nawaz to Imran
-
vExpo.pk and Habib Rafique sign agreement to set up “Virtual Smart Offices”