Islamabad: Pakistan's top religious body has said that taking the law into one's hands was against the teachings of Quran, Sharia and the Constitution as it demanded that those responsible for the Sri Lankan national's lynching in the country's Punjab province be brought to justice, a media report said on Tuesday.
In a shocking incident earlier this month, supporters of the radical Islamist party Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) attacked a garment factory in Sialkot and lynched its 49-year-old general manager - Priyantha Kumara Diyawadana - before setting his body on fire over allegations of blasphemy.
A first information report was registered against 900 people in the case. Of the total over 160 suspects detained in this case, Punjab police have conducted the forensic tests of 54 main suspects so far.
The Council of Islamic Ideology (CII) on Monday observed that a serious issue facing the country was implementation of laws and that the judicial system needed improvements to stop a recurrence of the Sialkot-like incident.
It said that if a person took the law into his own hands, the state should take immediate action against him.
According to a report in the Dawn newspaper, the CII held a brainstorming session over the Sialkot lynching. It was briefed by District Police Officer Omar Saeed Malik on the action taken.
Legislation is needed to prevent such incidents. Those responsible for the Sialkot tragedy should be punished, CII chairman Dr Qibla Ayaz said while talking to the media after the meeting.
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He said the purpose of the session was to determine and understand the causes behind the tragedy.