
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
ISLAMABAD (Worthy News) – Two sisters, both Christians, have been acquitted two months after being charged with “blasphemy” against Islam in Pakistan’s Punjab province, but concerns remain about other believers still held in Pakistani prisons, Christians said.
Christian charity Barnabas Aid told Worthy News on Tuesday that its “contacts confirmed that Sonia and Saima had been acquitted by Toba Tek Singh Sessions Court.”
Their full names were not revealed, apparently amid security concerns.
The two sisters had been accused on August 7 “of throwing a bag containing wastepaper with pages of the Quran on abandoned land,” Christians said.
They were reportedly detained and charged under section 295-B of the Pakistan Penal Code for “wilful defilement, damage or desecration of the Koran,” viewed as a holy book by Muslims.
This section of Pakistan’s blasphemy legislation law carries a mandatory life sentence for those convicted, according to experts.
Both women vehemently denied the accusations. In comments shared with Worthy News, their lawyer, Chaudhry Haneef Hameed Mithu, said, “The accusation had been made to settle a personal grudge.”
ORDERING ACQUITTAL
Sessions judge Waseem Mubarik ordered the acquittal after reviewing evidence supplied by the district police officer, according to Christians familiar with the case.
“Local police and lower courts in Pakistan routinely accept the truth of “blasphemy” allegations, so it is notable that in this instance, both police and court investigated properly,” Barnabas Fun noticed.
Police also intervened to prevent mob violence when the accusations were first made, Christians said. However, Barnabas Fund cautioned that “Sonia, Saima, their families, and the wider Christian community may still be at risk from extremists who will not accept the court’s decision.”
The group added that it urged its supporters to “pray that their release will serve as an example that will deter those who abuse Pakistan’s “blasphemy” laws to accuse Christians and other vulnerable people without cause. Pray for protection for the sisters, their family, and other Christians from any retaliation following this verdict.”
It was unclear how their case could impact
last month’s Pakistani court decision to sentence Shagufta Kiran, a Christian mother of four, to death for “committing blasphemy against Isla.”
The ruling by the Islamabad Cyber Court, first reported by Worthy News, “highlighted broader concerns about the persecution of Christians” in Muslim-majority Pakistan, suggested Farrukh H. Saif, the co-founder and director of the Emergency Committee to Save the Persecuted and Enslaved (ECSPE).
“Alongside the death penalty, Shagufta was fined 300,000 Pakistani Rupees ($1,077) in yet another controversial case under Pakistan’s stringent blasphemy laws,” he told Worthy News.
TRUMPED-UP CHARGES
His group has closely followed the case and supports Christians facing what he views as trumped-up blasphemy charges.
Shagufta Kiran was detained in July 2021 after being accused of forwarding a message through the social media messaging service WhatsApp that purportedly contained blasphemous content, Christians said.
The alleged crime dates back to September 2020, when Shagufta, a member of several interfaith WhatsApp groups, reportedly forwarded the controversial message.
In comments shared with Worthy News, her husband, Rafique Masih, said, “Shagufta forwarded the message without reading it and had no malicious intent.” The exact text wasn’t shared with Worthy News, but Worthy News established that even mild criticism about Islam is often perceived as blasphemy.
“Alongside Shagufta, her two young sons, ages 10 and 12, were also taken into custody, though they were later released.”
She is among hundreds of people, including Christians, who are believed to remain behind bars on blasphemy charges in the Islamic nation.
Advocacy groups Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have condemned Pakistan’s blasphemy laws as “inconsistent with fundamental human rights” and demand that Pakistan ensures fair trials and the protection of religious freedoms.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
A remote Indigenous community in western Canada was reeling Friday after a grizzly bear mauled a group of schoolchildren and teachers on a forest trail in British Columbia, injuring 11 people — two of them critically, according to local officials.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz was expected to join a high-level phone call Friday on a U.S.-Russian proposal to end the war in Ukraine, amid escalating deadly attacks in the embattled nation, according to people familiar with the discussions.
Delegates assessed the damage from a fire that briefly spread through several pavilions at the 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Brazil on Thursday, the latest setback for the gathering known as COP30.
A strong 5.5-magnitude earthquake shook central Bangladesh on Friday, killing at least eight people and injuring more than 300, authorities and local media said, as buildings in the capital Dhaka swayed violently and panicked residents fled into the streets.
Authorities say a boiler at a glue-making factory in eastern Pakistan exploded on Friday, killing at least 18 people and injuring 21 others, underscoring broader concerns over safety standards in the Islamic nation.
At least scores of students were abducted from a Catholic mission school in Nigeria’s troubled North Central region early Friday, just days after gunmen attacked a church, killing two people and taking dozens of worshippers hostage, officials and witnesses said.
The Israel Defense Forces announced Thursday that it uncovered one of the most extensive and sophisticated Hamas tunnel systems discovered to date, a sprawling underground route running more than seven kilometers (4.3 miles) and plunging approximately 25 meters (82 feet) underground beneath Rafah.