Relatives and supporters stand around the body of Mumtaz Qadri, the convicted killer of a former governor, during funeral ceremonies at his home yesterday. - AP Relatives and supporters stand around the body of Mumtaz Qadri, the convicted killer of a former governor, during funeral ceremonies at his home yesterday. - AP

RAWALPINDI: Pakistan yesterday hanged the man who killed a provincial governor for seeking reform of the blasphemy law, angering Islamist supporters who had feted Mumtaz Qadri as a hero and threatened violence if he was executed. Security was stepped up at flashpoints across the country including the garrison city of Rawalpindi where hundreds of supporters gathered at Qadri’s family home, as officials braced for protests from hardliners.

Qadri, a police bodyguard to Salman Taseer, shot the liberal Punjab governor 28 times at an Islamabad market in 2011. He said he was angry at the politician’s calls to reform the blasphemy law. Blasphemy is a hugely sensitive issue in the Islamic republic of some 200 million, and Qadri was hailed as a hero by many conservatives eager to drown out calls to soften the legislation. Critics, including European governments, say the law - which carries the death penalty - is largely misused, with hundreds languishing in jails under false charges.

Analyst Hasan Askari said the next 24 hours would be “sensitive” for the government, adding that Islamabad had weighed the danger of mass violence against the need to “wash away the suspicion” of sympathy for militancy. “Qadri was hanged in Adiala jail early Monday morning” in Rawalpindi, senior local police official Sajjid Gondal told AFP.

Mosques near Qadri’s family home in Rawalpindi broadcast the news, with cries heard from inside the house as hundreds of mourners arrived. Paramilitary Ranger forces and police in riot gear as well as ambulances and dozens of police vehicles were stationed at the house early yesterday.

But they had melted away by mid-morning, an AFP reporter said, leaving mourners forming a queue roughly a kilometre long to view the body on display at a nearby compound. “I have no regrets,” Qadri’s brother Malik Abid told AFP, tears rolling down his cheeks, while women chanted nearby.

He said the family had been called to the prison Sunday evening by officials who said Qadri was unwell. But when they arrived, Qadri greeted them with the news that authorities had deceived them and that his execution was imminent. “We started crying, but he hugged us and chanted ‘God is great’,” Abid said. “I am proud of the martyrdom of my son,” Qadri’s father Bashir Awan told AFP, adding he was ready to sacrifice all five of his other sons “for the honor of the Prophet”.

‘Justice Served’

Pakistan’s second largest Islamist party Jamaate- Islami said it planned protests in Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi for yesterday afternoon. But the national media downplayed the news. Most channels led their bulletins with Pakistan’s win for best foreign documentary at the Oscars. Earlier, authorities blocked roads in Rawalpindi and Islamabad, bringing morning traffic to a standstill.

Protesters in Islamabad burned tyres and briefly attacked a local news van. In the port mega-city of Karachi, demonstrators blocked main intersections. Police said security had been tightened there and in the eastern city of Lahore, while hundreds also protested in Pakistani-held Kashmir. Taseer’s son Shehryar said on Twitter the hanging was a victory for Pakistan, but not his family. “The safe return of my brother is the only victory my family wants,” he wrote, referring to his sibling Shahbaz Taseer, who was kidnapped later in 2011 reportedly by the Taleban - despite being given a police escort after his father’s killing. —AFP