Pakistan under pressure to rein in blasphemy law

In this Monday, Feb. 26, 2018 photo, Pakistani civil society activists protest in favor of the Christian community in Karachi, Pakistan. Pakistan’s blasphemy law terrifies minorities, quashes dissent and emboldens radicals, who use it to whip up extremism in the population and threaten those who oppose them. But now activists are calling for change in the law as Pakistan comes under increased pressure from the United States and other countries to do more to curb radicalism and militant groups. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)

LAHORE, Pakistan — One of the most frightening things about Pakistan’s blasphemy law is that the simplest act can spiral into charges that can bring the death penalty. In the case of Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman, it started when she brought water to her fellow women workers on a farm.

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