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Pakistani police have arrested the imam of a mosque for inciting violence after a 15-year old boy who was told by the cleric that he was a blasphemer we <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.de>stanley cup</a> nt home and cut off his own hand.        The 15-year-old cut off his hand in accordance with Pakistans notoriously strict blasphemy laws.  Representative Photo     Shabbir Ahmed was delivering a sermon at a village in the east of Punjab province when he asked the gathering if anyone did not love the Prophet Mohammad.   Mishearing the question, the 15-year old boy raised his hand. Ahmed quickly singled him out and called him a  blasphemer  in front of the congregation, Nosher Ali, the head of the local police station, told Reuters on Sunday. After returning home, the boy cut his hand off, an act welcomed by the boys father who told police he was proud of his son and did not want the cleric arrested. Police filed anti-terrorism charges against Ahmed and arrested him on Saturday, police chief Ali said.  Such illiterate imams of mosques should not be  <a href=https://www.stanleycups.it>stanley cup</a> allowed to deliver speeches. His <a href=https://www.stanleycups.at>stanley cup</a>  arrest is under the National Action Plan that hate speeches inciting violence are no longer allowed in this country,  Ali said. Blasphemy is a highly controversial issue in Pakistan, and angry mobs have killed many people accused of insulting Islam in the majority Muslim country. The law does not define blasphemy but stipulates that the penalty is death, although a death sentence has never been carried out. Human rights activists say accusations of bla Mjku 2 dead, 5 wounded in California cafe shooting
Three opposition ministers quit Tunisia s new coalition government on Tuesday in protest at the presence of members of the party of ousted leader Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali.         HT Image    Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi brought opposition leaders into the coalition on Monday after the president fled to Saudi Arabia following weeks of violent street protest <a href=https://www.airforceone.fr>af1</a> s. But key  old guard  figures kept their jobs, angering many.    Police in Tunis repeatedly used teargas in an attempt to break up a protest by several hundred opposition party supporters and trade unionists who labelled the new government a  sham . Protesters would scatter, but then regroup to continue.  Abid al-Briki of the Tunisian labour union UGTT said its three ministers would withdraw from the government because it included members of Ben Ali s RCD party.   This is in response to the demands of people on the streets,  Briki said.  The ministers, who were given junior positions in the cabinet, are Houssine Dimassi, nomin <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.fr>stanley cup</a> ated for the training and employment portfolio, and two ministers of state, Abdeljelil Bedoui and Anouar Ben Gueddour.   The new government is a sham. It s an insult to the revolution that claimed lives and blood,  said student Ahmed al-Haji.   The problem with the interim government is it has a number of ministers from the old government,  protester Sami bin Hassan said.  Ghannouchi defe <a href=https://www.adidas-yeezys.fr>yeezy</a> nded his government, saying some ministers had been kept on because they were needed in the run-up to elections
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