ICC Note:
A Christian TV station in Pakistan is back on air three weeks after a suspected arson attack destroyed their Karachi studio. Using borrowed equipment, the Christian TV station is broadcasting their regular Christmas season programs. The Christian owners of the station are convinced the fire was an act of arson due to the locks being cut and chemicals being used to intensify the blaze. Local police looking into the matter dispute this and say it was merely an electrical short.
12/18/2015 Pakistan (Washington Post) – Three weeks after what its owners call a suspicious fire, Gawahi TV, one of this Muslim nation’s few Christian television stations, has resumed transmission.
The Rev. Sarfraz William, owner and CEO of the Karachi-based television station, said that since the station’s equipment was completely lost in the fire, he has borrowed equipment to continue broadcasting concerts, prayers and church services during the busy Christmas season.
“We are doing God’s work and we are doing whatever we can to render our services on Christmas by resuming the transmission,” he said. “Though it is not in the way we had planned on Christmas, but something is better than nothing.”
William and his brother, Javed William, who also works at the station, described the Nov. 24 fire as deliberately set. They said locks were cut, and chemicals were sprayed to boost the flames and burn evidence of arson.
Local police dispute claims that the fire was an attack on Christians. Station House Officer Sarwar Commando told Religion News Service that an electrical short circuit caused the fire. But he could not say how it was determined that the fire was not an attack.
Nadeem Anthony, a Lahore-based lawyer and advocate for Pakistani Christians, described the fire as an act of religious intolerance.
“But it is impossible for them (the station owners) to point a finger at anybody, as in all other Christian persecution in Pakistan,” he said. If they did, he said, “it would be difficult for them to survive.”
The fire at Gawahi TV is only the latest in a string of attacks on Pakistan’s Christians, who make up less than 2 percent of the overall population, or about 4 million people. More than a dozen people were killed in two bombings outside churches in Lahore in March, and last year a Christian couple were burned to death in an industrial kiln by a large mob.
And Aasiya Bibi, a 40-year-old Christian, has been in jail for six years after being convicted of blasphemy for allegedly desecrating a Quran. She was sentenced to be hanged but is appealing the ruling. Her case has brought worldwide scrutiny to Pakistan’s treatment of its religious minorities.
Open Doors, an American-based organization that advocates for minority Christians, ranks Pakistan as one of the top 10 places where Christians face the most persecution.
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