August 19, 2025
2 mins read

Pakistan: Ahmadi Mosques Torched, Outrage Follows

Police reports say over 300 attackers armed with rods and bricks targeted Ahmadiyya worshippers during Independence Day processions in Dijkot….reports Asian Lite News

A prominent minority group on Monday condemned attacks on religious minorities in Pakistan, citing the mob-led torching of two Ahmadiyya places of worship by leaders of the hardline Islamist party Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP).

The Voice of Pakistan Minority (VOPM) mentioned that on the occasion of Pakistan’s 78th Independence Day, extremists turned the country’s streets into battlegrounds of hate. In Faisalabad district of Punjab province, two Ahmadiyya places of worship were set ablaze by the mob serving as an ugly reminder that in Pakistan, religious freedom remains an illusion.

Citing police reports, the rights body revealed that more than 300 attackers, armed with rods and bricks, descended on Ahmadiyya worshippers under the cover of Independence Day processions in the Dijkot area.

The VOPM highlighted that their main target was the two mosques built decades before Pakistan criminalized Ahmadiyya worship in 1984. They tore down minarets, delivered fiery hate speeches, and torched the buildings while hurling stones at nearby Ahmadiyya homes.

The rights body stressed that the violent incident left families, including women and children terrorised, while several sustained injuries.

According to the VOPM, the mob was reportedly led by TLP ticket-holder Hafiz Rafaqat, exposing once again how mainstream extremist groups openly incite violence under political and religious banners. It stated that TLP, notorious for its violent street power, enjoys immunity in Pakistan’s political and judicial system while minorities pay the price.

“This was no spontaneous riot — it was organised terrorism, with cases now registered under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 and multiple sections of the Pakistan Penal Code. Yet, history shows such cases rarely lead to real accountability. Arrests are made, but justice seldom follows, as extremist groups continue to act as untouchable power brokers,” read a statement issued by VOPM.

The rights body emphasised that the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) had, a day before the violent incident, warned about rising hate speech from clerics against non-Muslims. However, it said the warning was ignored and the Pakistani police response was reactionary, not preventive.

Although 25 arrests were made, the VOPM noted that the police officials refused to confirm whether those detained included the nominated suspects.

“The silence of Faisalabad’s police chief further reflects the institutional reluctance to confront extremism head-on,” said the rights body.

Raising concern, the VOPM stressed that this is not an isolated incident but is part of a systemic, decades-long campaign against Ahmadiyyas and other minorities in Pakistan.

“From discriminatory laws to mob violence, the Pakistani state has allowed extremist ideologies to flourish unchecked. Every time the state bends to clerical power, it emboldens groups like TLP to dictate who belongs in the ‘Islamic Republic’ and who does not,” the VOPM stated.

If Pakistan wants to have any credibility as a modern nation, the rights body demanded, then the authorities must crush extremist groups like TLP rather than appeasing them. Additionally, the VOPM called on to enforce Supreme Court rulings against hate speech and mob violence and also protect minorities as equal citizens, not “sacrificial pawns in a theocratic power game”.

Previous Story

Jaishankar in Russia for 3-Day Visit

Next Story

Gang Violence, Khalistan Extremism Put Canada on Edge

Latest from -Top News

Gang Violence, Khalistan Extremism Put Canada on Edge

gang-driven extortion and Khalistani extremism, threatening public safety, community trust, and bilateral ties with India…reports Asian Lite News Canada is grappling with a nexus of gang-led extortion and Khalistani extremism that threatens

Jaishankar in Russia for 3-Day Visit

The visit, scheduled till August 21, comes at the invitation of Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Denis Manturov….reports Asian Lite News External Affairs Minister (EAM) S. Jaishankar will leave for Russia on

Modi, Putin Discuss Alaska

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday spoke with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, sharing his assessment of last week’s meeting with US President Donald Trump in Alaska PM Modi reiterated India’s consistent stance

Wang Yi Arrives In Delhi

In July, EAM Jaishankar attended the SCO Meeting of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs in Tianjin, meeting his Chinese counterpart and calling on Xi Jinping alongside other SCO Foreign Ministers

Peace Key To India-China Ties

Wang Yi is scheduled to hold a fresh round of Special Representatives dialogue with NSA Ajit Doval on the boundary question and later call on Prime Minister Narendra Modi Emphasising the importance
Go toTop

Don't Miss

23rd SCO meet at Islamabad to focus on trade

Foreign ministers and officials from Turkmenistan, attending as special guests,

Pak Army kills two terrorists in Balochistan

According to the ISPR, a group of 10 to 12