07
03/11
Pakistan Christians bury murdered leader Shahbaz Bhatti

Mr Bhatti was laid to rest in the family grave in his village of Khushpur Top government leaders, MPs, foreign diplomats and Christians joined relatives and friends at the service.
Mr Bhatti’s coffin – wrapped in the green and white of Pakistan along with a flag of the all-Pakistan Minorities’ Alliance – was then flown by helicopter to Faisalabad.
In the minister’s native village of Khushpur nearby, black flags flew for the burial.
“The killers have snatched our hero,” said Mr Bhatti’s brother, Sikander, the Associated Press (AP) reports.
So large were the crowds that the burial was delayed by several hours, the BBC’s M Ilyas Khan reports from Khushpur.
He says the thousands of mourners waited all day to pay their respects.
Amid fears the service could be attacked, the entire village was sealed off and hundreds of security personnel deployed.
Shahbaz Bhatti predicted his death in a video recorded four months ago
Christians say their community, and other minorities, no longer feel secure in Pakistan. Few believe government promises the killers will be brought to justice.
“They have neither the ability nor the will,” one Khushpur mourner, Nasreen Gill, told AP.
The BBC’s Syed Shoaib Hasan in Karachi says Mr Bhatti has become a martyr for the local Christian community because of his outspoken stance on the blasphemy laws.
But our correspondent says the government seems to lack his courage to amend what many are now calling Pakistan’s black law, and the liberal intelligentsia feel under siege.
In January, an MP from the governing Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), Sherry Rehman, dropped a bill to reform the law, because her party leaders would not back it.
She has all but disappeared from view amid concerns for her security.
Security questions The apparent ease with which Mr Bhatti, a PPP leader, was killed has caused great concern.

Prayers were said at church in Islamabad before the coffin was flown to Mr Bhatti’s home village for burial He had just left his mother’s home in a suburb of the capital when several gunmen surrounded his vehicle and riddled it with bullets in daylight, say witnesses.
The minister’s driver was spared before the gunmen escaped.
Mr Bhatti was without guards or the security escort that is standard for all Pakistani ministers, and it is not clear why. Police and federal officials are investigating.
Even before his assassination, Mr Bhatti had predicted his own death in a chilling video. He told the BBC he had been denied more protection but would defy the death threats from Islamist militants for his efforts to reform the blasphemy law.
The law has been in the spotlight since a Christian, Asia Bibi, was sentenced to hang in Punjab last November. She denies insulting the Prophet Muhammad.
Christians make up an estimated 1.5% of Pakistan’s 185 million population.
There were emotional scenes as Christians buried Shahbaz Bhatti