ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani court has indicted 89 people for killing a Sri Lankan factory manager in Sialkot last December, reported a local newspaper on Sunday.
Priyantha Kumara, who supervised a garment factory, was killed and his body set ablaze by a Muslim mob over what police said were accusations of desecrating religious posters.
The incident created a tough diplomatic situation for Pakistan, making Prime Minister Imran Khan condemn the brutal killing and a group of prominent Islamic scholars visit the Sri Lankan embassy to meet the ambassador and offer him condolences.
Sialkot's business community also raised $100,000 for Kumara's bereaved wife and two children and pledged to take care of their financial needs.
“An anti-terrorism court (ATC) on Saturday indicted 89 suspects for their involvement in the mob lynching of Sri Lankan national Priyantha Kumara in Sialkot,” reported the Express Tribune.
It added the prosecution would bring 40 witnesses and use videos along with other digital evidence to prove its case against the suspects.
The Pakistani authorities also performed forensic analysis on the footage obtained from video recorders at the factory where Kumara worked. Some of the suspects were also identified using social media clips and footage of the lynching recovered from the mobile phones of 56 accused.
“The factory manager, who tried to save Sri Lankan victim Priyantha Kumara, is also among the witnesses,” the newspaper added.