Masood Ahmad is a quiet, reserved widower who returned to Pakistan
to open a pharmacy in 1982 after decades of working in London to pay
his children's school fees, his family said.
He is also an Ahmadi, a sect that consider themselves Muslim but
believe in a prophet after Mohammed. A 1984 Pakistani law declared
them non-Muslims, and Ahmadis can be jailed for three years for
posing as a Muslim or outraging Muslims' feelings.
Some mullahs promise that killing Ahmadis earns a place in heaven.
Leaflets list their home addresses.
Three years ago, 86 Ahmadis were killed in two simultaneous attacks
on Friday prayers in Lahore. There have been no mass attacks since
then, but targeted killings are rising: last year 20 Ahmadis were
killed, up from 11 in 2009.
And legal prosecutions are on the rise, say Ahmadis, some of which
they say are linked to property grabs.
Ahmad was arrested in Pakistan's eastern city of Lahore last month
when two men posing as patients questioned him about his faith and
used mobile phones to secretly record him reading a verse from the
Koran.
"He (the patient) said you are like a father to me, please help me
with some questions," said the doctor's older brother, Nasir Ahmad.
"When (my brother) answered, they began beating him and dragged him
outside by his neck."
One of his accusers, Islamic teacher Muhammad Ihsan, told Reuters
that Ahmad had preached to them illegally.
Last year 20 cases against Ahmadis were registered, up from 10 cases
in 2009. A bank clerk was arrested for wearing a ring with a Koranic
verse and an entire family was charged for writing a Muslim greeting
on a wedding invitation.
Mullahs have twice sought the arrest of an entire town of Ahmadis — 60,000 people — for holding religious celebrations. Residents were
serving food, giving out sweets and displaying bunting, the
complaints said.
"We would not have a problem with them if they did not use the name
of Islam and the symbols of Islam," said Tahir Ashrafi, head of the
powerful Ulema Council of clerics.
"We are against the killing of any innocent, Qadiani or Shi'ite or
any non-Muslim. Such attacks are not acceptable or allowed, but if
they break the law, we have a right to go to the police," he said,
using another term for Ahmadis.
"HIS CHILDREN WATCHED HIM DIE"
There are about half a million Ahmadis in Pakistan, their leaders
say. Many only feel safe in Rabwa, a town they bought when Pakistan
was created in 1947. On its main streets, banks of security cameras
monitor fruit vendors and dozing dogs.
Near the playing fields, blocks of flats house families that fled
other parts of Pakistan after loved ones were murdered.
Rafiatta, who asked her last name not be used, moved to Rabwa after
gunmen killed her husband in 2010 in front of their young children.
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"He was just a hardworking man who loved his family," she said. The
family fled after two Ahmadi neighbors were also killed and men
tried to kidnap Raffiata's young son.
The Ahmadi are also targets outside Pakistan. In Indonesia, a
gruesome YouTube video recorded a mass lynching in 2011 as police
looked on. Ahmadi publications are banned in Bangladesh, where a
festival site was torched earlier this year.
In Britain, Ahmadi buildings have been vandalized and leaflets have
appeared forbidding them to enter shops and urging Muslims to kill
them, British media have reported.
But Pakistan is the epicenter of persecution.
JAILED WITH NO BAIL
Last April, a 25-year-old hospital clerk and his father were at home
in Lahore reading an Ahmadi newspaper when a crowd of mullahs broke
down their door, the clerk said.
They beat the two while a crowd looted their home. Then a gunman
forced the pair into a car without license plates, the clerk said.
He asked not to be named for fear of retribution.
Their kidnappers went free but the two were eventually charged with
impersonating Muslims in special anti-terrorist courts designed to
combat the Taliban.
The clerk was released after a month, but his father, who has not
yet been convicted, has been in prison for nine months. The family
has since fled their home and the man now occupying it is refusing
to pay them for it.
"Nobody has the courage to give him bail or dismiss the case," the
clerk said.
And that's what Masood Ahmad's family fears. He has had three bail
hearings. One was picketed by scores of mullahs chanting anti-Ahmadi
slogans and his frightened lawyer skipped the next two. British
authorities are giving him consular assistance.
His son, one of seven children in Britain and Australia, said the
family suspected someone was trying to steal his father's
dispensary.
"I feel so angry because I can't do anything from here," said
39-year-old Abbas Ahmad, a cab driver in Glasgow. "It's awful to
know that people were plotting against someone you love."
(Additional reporting by Mubasher Bukhari and Amjad Ali;
editing by
John Chalmers and Michael Perry)
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