Article Photos: Change of Pakistan's blasphemy laws unlikely



  In this photo taken on Tuesday Sept. 11, 2012 Bishop Ishaque Mazhar, left, presents a trophy to Pakistani cleric Tahir Mahmood Ashrafi, right, for his key role in the release of the Christian girl faced blasphemy charges, in Islamabad, Pakistan. The apparent collapse of a case against a Christian girl accused of burning pages of a Quran has given a dim ray of hope to critics of Pakistan?s blasphemy laws, some of the harshest in the Muslim world. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)

In this photo taken on Tuesday Sept. 11, 2012 Bishop Ishaque Mazhar, left, presents a trophy to Pakistani cleric Tahir Mahmood Ashrafi, right, for his key role in the release of the Christian girl faced blasphemy charges, in Islamabad, Pakistan. The apparent collapse of a case against a Christian girl accused of burning pages of a Quran has given a dim ray of hope to critics of Pakistan?s blasphemy laws, some of the harshest in the Muslim world. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)