Police guard charged with 'blasphemy' murder of Pakistan governor

Mumtaz Qadri has admitted to killing the Punjab governor, Salman Taseer, who opposed Pakistan's harsh anti-blasphemy laws.

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ISLAMABAD // A Pakistani court has charged a police guard with the murder of a moderate politician who opposed the country's harsh anti-blasphemy laws, a case that exposed deep fissures in Pakistani society.

Mumtaz Qadri, who admitted to killing the Punjab governor Salman Taseer on January 4, gained wide support, especially from Islamists who see liberal politicians such as Taseer as straying from Pakistan's Islamist credentials.

"The charges have been framed against Mr Qadri and the prosecution has been asked by the court to present evidence in the next hearing," the prosecutor said.

Taseer, who was close to President Asif Ali Zardari, had championed the cause of a Christian woman sentenced to death under the blasphemy law.

Critics say the law has often been misused against Pakistan's tiny religious minorities and to settle personal scores. Taseer had sought changes to the law, angering hardline Islamist groups.

After Mr Qadri pumped 27 bullets into Taseer in broad daylight at an Islamabad shopping centre, he was viewed as a hero by many Pakistanis, highlighting how deeply religious extremism has penetrated mainstream Pakistani society.

Mr Qadri's lawyer, Tariq Dhamial, quoted him as saying in court before the charges were read: "I have taught a lesson to the apostate Salman Taseer in the light of the teachings of the Quran."

How the case unfolds in Pakistan will be closely watched by the United States and other western countries.

Some western nations accuse Mr Zardari's government of being too soft on Islamist extremism, one of many destabilising forces in nuclear-armed Pakistan.

Pakistani rights activists hailed Mr Qadri's indictment.

A human rights campaigner and former law minister, Iqbal Haider, said: "Qadri's statement is a complete confession of an uncondonable and brutal murder. All sane people will appreciate this indictment."

But the leader of an Islamist party defended the police guard. Tariq Mehboob, the deputy secretary general of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Pakistan party, said: "He [Taseer] himself was responsible for his killing as he had hurt the religious sentiments and feelings of the whole nation by terming the blasphemy law as a 'black law',"