The Washington Post: Islamist terrorism wanes in Pakistan, but religious fervor threatens national unity

The Washington Post: Islamist terrorism wanes in Pakistan, but religious fervor threatens national unity
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Updated 08 May 2018
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The Washington Post: Islamist terrorism wanes in Pakistan, but religious fervor threatens national unity

The Washington Post: Islamist terrorism wanes in Pakistan, but religious fervor threatens national unity

May 7: The Washington Post report by Pamela Constable states that by voting last week to revoke an honor bestowed on the first Pakistani to receive a Nobel Prize in science, Pakistan’s National Assembly opted for political expediency in the face of a fast-rising Muslim group that denounces members of the late physicist’s faith as blasphemers. Abdus Salam, who died in 1996, was a member of the Ahmadiyya minority sect, and no politician was eager to challenge the Muslim group, known as the Movement in Service to the Prophet. So lawmakers decided to take his name off a renowned physics center. But on Sunday, when a young member of the movement shot and severely wounded Pakistan’s interior minister at a public gathering, there was immediate condemnation across the political spectrum and a flood of horrified comments on social media.

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