Pakistani Grooms Face Terror Charges over Wedding Fireworks

Local Editor
Two newly-wed brothers in Pakistan could be facing long prison sentences after police arrested them on terrorism charges for letting off firecrackers during their joint wedding ceremony.

It is a longstanding, if dangerous, custom at Pakistani weddings to set off fireworks and fire weapons in the air in celebration, but police in Karachi said this time the happy couples went too far.
Police officer Abbas Golarchi, who booked the grooms along with three other people, indicated that they were charged under the explosives provisions of anti-terrorism legislation.
"Very powerful crackers were being used during the marriage ceremony creating fear among the neighborhood, a densely populated area of the city," Abbas Golarchi said.
Golarchi stated the charges were non-bailable and the five arrested were in police custody awaiting a remand hearing expected Wednesday.
If found guilty, they could face long prison sentences or even the death sentence; though this was unlikely as no one was harmed during the joint wedding celebration.
Rights campaigners said Pakistan's anti-terrorism legislation and anti-terrorism courts were frequently misused to prosecute cases that had nothing to do with militancy.
More generally, Pakistani police were often criticized for their heavy-handed approach.
In April last year, police in the eastern city of Lahore booked a nine-month-old boy on an attempted murder charge after his family members allegedly threw bricks at officers trying to collect an unpaid bill.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team
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