Bombed and blamed: Pakistan’s Christians are in trouble

A Pakistani Christian woman mourns the death of a relative killed in a suicide bombing near damage at the All Saints church in Peshawar on Sept. 24, 2013. A devastating double suicide attack on a church in northwest Pakistan has triggered fears among the country's beleaguered Christian community that they will be targeted in a fresh wave of Islamist violence.  (A. Majeed/AFP/Getty Images)

A Pakistani Christian woman mourns the death of a relative killed in a suicide bombing near damage at the All Saints church in Peshawar on Sept. 24, 2013. A devastating double suicide attack on a church in northwest Pakistan has triggered fears among the country’s beleaguered Christian community that they will be targeted in a fresh wave of Islamist violence. (A. Majeed/AFP/Getty Images)

Some Karachi residents have an easier time dismissing violence when it targets Christians, a small minority group in Pakistan.

Mariya Karimjee reports for GlobalPost on the local response to the suicide bombing at All Saints Church in Peshawar on Tuesday, September 24 that killed at least 80.

This entry was posted in Europe and North Eurasia, Luce Top News, Main Top News, Reporting, Reporting & Resources, Resources. Bookmark the permalink.