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Murders happen when young people are emotionally charged: Khattak

Published on: December 6, 2021 12:57 PM

Defence Minister Pervez Khattak has said there should be no connection between the Sialkot mob’s lynching of a Sri Lankan man and the government’s decision to relax the ban on the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP). 

The minister, speaking to the press on Sunday, said “murders take place” when emotions are high in young people.

The minister was addressing the media in Peshawar during countrywide outrage after a mob of hundreds of protestors tortured and burned the body of a Sri Lankan factory manager, Priyantha Kumara, over blasphemy allegations on Friday.

A reporter asked Khattak if the government was planning “solid action” against groups such as the TLP to prevent future incidents like the one in Sialkot.

To which Khattak asked, “When you were in college, were you also not emotional?”

“I know you were,” he stated.

“Everyone has a different mindset; a mob gathered and someone chanted a slogan related to Islam that led to such an incident,” Khattak added.

The minister admitted that he can also make a mistake when overcome by emotions, but added that such instances did not mean “Pakistan is on the verge of catastrophe.”

The reporter then asked the minister if he was linking the alleged killings of nine police officers by TLP protesters, as well as Kumara’s, to “emotions”. 

Khattak immediately shifted the blame to the media, declaring, “Why don’t you change this mindset? Youngsters fight and murders take place [at times]. It is the job of the media to inform the youth.”

“The media only accepts advertisements and makes money,” an irate Khattak claimed.

On November 2, the government began implementing the accord with TLP, with reports suggesting that it had released more than 800 supporters of the party arrested across Punjab.

A week later, on November 7, TLP ceased to be a proscribed organisation after the government accorded approval to the Ministry of Interior’s summary asking for its removal from the First Schedule of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997.

TLP was placed in the said schedule in April 2021 on the recommendation of the Punjab home department.

Filed Under: Pakistan Tagged With: Latest, Lead4, Pervaiz Khattak, sialkot mob, young people

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