Pakis mourn death of man in German jail
Pakis mourn death of man in German jail
A Pakistani died in a German jail, awaiting trial for trying to murder the editor of the paper that published Prophet's caricature.

Saroki (Pakistan); Tens of thousands of mourners, mostly Islamist party activists, attended the funeral on Saturday of a Pakistani man who died in a German jail while awaiting trial for trying to murder a newspaper editor.

Amir Cheema, 28, died in custody 10 days ago after being arrested in March on charges of attempting to kill the editor of Die Welt for reprinting cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad first published in Denmark last year.

An adviser to the chief minister of Punjab province laid a wreath on the coffin when it arrived in Lahore on Saturday morning before it was flown in a helicopter 64 km north to the family village in Saroki.

While the Punjab government is run by the Pakistan Muslim League heading the federal government, it is the Islamist parties opposed to President Pervez Musharraf which have sought to make most political capital from the death of Cheema, depicting him as a martyr, defending Muslim honour.

Depicting images of the Prophet is against the teachings of Islam.

Up to 30,000 thousand mourners had congregated in Saroki and the coffin's arrival was greeted with chants of Get Amir's Killers and Musharraf Go, witnesses said.

Activists from the Islamist opposition parties were prominent among the crowd, and thousands of religious students, as well as lawyers and doctors, flocked to Saroki for the funeral.

Supporters of Jamaat-ud-Dawa, an organisation banned by the United States earlier this month for its links with terrorism, tried to stop journalists from taking photographs.

Germany's ambassador to Pakistan, Gunter Mulack, told a news conference in Islamabad on Friday that preliminary findings showed there were "no traces or indications of physical violence or other external influence" on Cheema's body.

A lawmaker from Jamaat-i-Islami party Farid Piracha, who first raised the issue in the National Assembly over a week ago, was at the funeral and maintained Cheema had been killed.

"The killing of Cheema was a barbaric act. He was killed by torture," Piracha told Reuters.

Another Islamist lawmaker, Liaquat Baloch wanted an independent investigation and said any German officials found culpable should be tried under Pakistani law.

The Islamist parties organised small but fiery protests in the capital and several cities in Punjab province on Friday.

The demonstrations were only attended by a few hundred people in each place, but there were demands for the expulsion of the German ambassador and attacks on German interests, together with calls for jihad, or holy war, and the overthrow of Musharraf's government.

Some of the largest and most violent protests against the cartoons in the Islamic world took place in Pakistan in February and March, as Islamist parties seized on the issue to undermine Musharraf, who is often criticised for cooperating with the United States in a global war on terrorism.

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