Lahore, Dec 29 (PTI) Authorities in Pakistan’s Punjab province on Wednesday said they have detained 85 main suspects after determining their role in the brutal lynching of a Sri Lankan national in Sialkot city earlier this month.
In a shocking incident, a mob of 800 men, including supporters of the radical Islamist party Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), attacked a garment factory in Sialkot on December 3 and lynched its 49-year-old general manager – Priyantha Kumara Diyawadana – before setting his body on fire over allegations of blasphemy.
“Currently 85 main suspects whose role has been identified through video footages and investigation in the brutal lynching of Priyantha Kumara are detained on physical remand, an official of the Punjab police told PTI on Wednesday.
The official said over 100 other suspects were also included in the investigation but no evidence of their involvement in the case was detected, thus they were not named in the FIR and some of them who were detained were released.
We want to present a strong case against prime suspects in the court and investigation teams are working hard on it, he said, adding the police will submit the investigation report against the 85 detained suspects in the anti-terrorism court likely at the end of next month.
On Tuesday, the Lahore High Court Chief Justice Muhammad Ameer Bhatti directed Sialkot District Police Officer (DPO) Omar Saeed Malik to complete investigation of the suspects and submit the report to the court at the earliest so that the trial in the case could begin.
DPO Malik gave a detailed briefing to the chief justice on the progress made so far in the lynching case of the Sri Lankan citizen.
The Sialkot District Bar Association has already announced not to represent the suspects.
“No lawyer will pursue the case on behalf of the suspects,” the bar said in a statement.
The business community has collected USD 100,000 for the family of Kumara. The factory management has also decided to send the monthly salary of the deceased to his family.
The federal or the provincial government has yet to announce any compensation package for the victim’s family so far.
Kumara was working as general manager in the Rajko industries (dealing in garments sportswear) in Sialkot district for over seven years.
The incident sparked outrage across Pakistan with all sections of society condemning it and calling for the culprits to be punished.
Pakistan’s Senate on Friday passed an unanimous resolution condemning the lynching.
The Sri Lankan Parliament, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa have condemned the brutal killing and expressed hope that Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government would bring the guilty to justice.