Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Asia Pakistan

Body of Sri Lankan factory manager killed by Pakistan mob flown home

131 people held so far, including 26 prime suspects, who have been remanded in custody



Policemen escort a suspect accused for the killing of Sri Lankan's factory manager as they leave an anti-terrorist court in Gujranwala on December 6, 2021.
Image Credit: AFP

Lahore, Pakistan: Pakistan on Monday repatriated the remains of a Sri Lankan factory manager who was beaten to death and set ablaze by a mob after they accused him of blasphemy.

The vigilante attack has sparked outrage, with Prime Minister Imran Khan calling it a “day of shame for Pakistan”.

Priyantha Diyawadana was killed on Friday in the central district of Sialkot, in Punjab province, about 200km southeast of the capital Islamabad.

“The dead body of the Sri Lankan manager has been airlifted and sent to Colombo,” Tahir Ashrafi, a religious scholar and special representative of the prime minister on religious harmony, told AFP.

Police have so far arrested 131 people including 26 prime suspects who have been remanded in custody, Sialkot police spokesman Khurram Shehzad told AFP.

Advertisement

Several gruesome video clips shared on social media showed a mob beating the prone victim while chanting slogans against blasphemy.

Many in the crowd made no attempt to hide their identity and some took selfies in front of the burning corpse.

Local police officials told AFP that rumours spread that Diyawadana had “torn down a religious poster and thrown it in the dustbin”.

Ashrafi told AFP that workers had also complained of the manager being “very strict”.

“Police experts are investigating this case from various angles, including that some factory workers played a religious card to take revenge on the manager,” he said at the weekend.

Advertisement

Rights groups say accusations of blasphemy can often be wielded to settle personal vendettas, with minorities largely the target.

A Christian couple was lynched then burnt in a kiln in Punjab in 2014 after being falsely accused of desecrating the Koran.

In April 2017 an angry mob killed university student Mashal Khan when he was accused of posting blasphemous content online.

And only last month, thousands of people torched a police station in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province after demanding officers hand over a man accused of burning the Quran

Advertisement