By Christianity News Daily Staff
April 10, 2026
Outrage is growing in Pakistan after Iftikhar Masih, a 42-year-old Christian father of four from the Lahore area, died in police custody within hours of being detained on what his family said were false kidnapping allegations. His death, reported by Morning Star News on April 7, has intensified concern over the treatment of religious minorities and vulnerable Christians. Relatives say police tried to present the death as suicide, but his brother reported visible signs of torture on the body.
Furthermore, Morning Star News indicated that Masih’s family accused the police of demanding money for his release before later informing them he had been found hanging from a ceiling fan with a scarf. His brother, disputing this version, argued that the state of the body pointed to severe mistreatment rather than suicide. The report also notes that Masih left behind a widow and four children, deepening the pain for the local Christian community.
This tragedy has not gone unnoticed. UCANews reported in late March that hundreds of Christians protested the custodial death and demanded justice, illustrating wider frustration over the ease with which poor and minority citizens become victims of abuse in custody.
Unfortunately, this is not an isolated concern. International Christian Concern reported on March 27 about another Pakistani Christian laborer, Marqas Masih, whose family also alleged torture before his death—another case authorities reportedly portrayed as suicide. ICC said this renewed long-standing fears among Christians regarding their vulnerability to coercion, false accusation, and mistreatment due to poverty and minority status.
The larger context in Pakistan makes stories like these especially troubling. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom said in its 2025 annual report and later Pakistan update that religious minorities in Pakistan, including Christians, continue to face severe religious-freedom violations, with blasphemy accusations, mob violence, discriminatory enforcement, and weak accountability remaining major problems. USCIRF has continued to recommend that Pakistan be designated a Country of Particular Concern for systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.
Thus, for the church, this is more than a crime story. It stands as a reminder that in many parts of the world, Christians live under pressures arising from social weakness, economic vulnerability, and religious minority status. When believers are silenced, abused, or ignored with little consequence, the body of Christ must not look away. The suffering of one Christian family in Pakistan should stir prayer, sober reflection, and a strengthened commitment to remember persecuted believers.
Psalm 82:3 says, “Defend the poor and fatherless; do justice to the afflicted and needy” (NKJV). That command speaks directly to situations in which the weak are denied fairness and truth. When a grieving family must fight not only for justice but even for an honest account of what happened, the need for righteous judgment becomes painfully clear.
This case also calls to mind Proverbs 31:8: “Open your mouth for the speechless, in the cause of all who are appointed to die” (NKJV). Believers must stand up for the vulnerable, commit to persistent prayer for the grieving, and speak out against injustice. Actively champion the rights of the persecuted where fear and silence often prevail.
At the same time, Christians must remember that the Lord sees what human systems often hide. He knows every false charge, every abuse of power, and every tear shed by widows and children left behind. Even when justice on earth moves slowly, God remains the righteous Judge. The church should therefore respond not only with grief, but with steadfast intercession for suffering believers in Pakistan and for a witness to Christ that remains strong in the face of fear.
Why This Matters
This story matters because it shows how exposed Christians and other minorities can be when legal systems are weak, abuse goes unchecked, and truth becomes difficult to secure. More broadly, persecution is not only carried out by mobs or extremists; at times, it is felt through institutions, custody systems, and the unequal treatment of vulnerable believers.
Prayer Focus
Pray for comfort and provision for the family of Iftikhar Masih, especially for his widow and children.
Pray that truth would come to light in this case and that those responsible for abuse and injustice would be held accountable.
Pray for Christians in Pakistan to remain steadfast in faith, courage, and hope, and that the Lord would protect vulnerable believers across the country.
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Sources
Morning Star News; International Christian Concern; USCIRF; UCANews; other publicly available reporting reviewed by Christianity News Daily.
