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The synagogue is inside the building of the Star of the North Jewish Cultural Center. (file photo)
The synagogue is inside the building of the Star of the North Jewish Cultural Center. (file photo)

ARKHANGELSK, Russia -- Arsonists have attacked a synagogue in Russia's northwestern city of Arkhangelsk, the latest attack on the property since 2015.

Anatoly Obermeister, the leader of the local Jewish community, told RFE/RL that the culprits used car tires and a combustible substance in the attack, which took place during the early hours of April 13.

The synagogue, which was extensively damaged by the fire, is inside the building of the Star of the North Jewish Cultural Center in the city.

"I hope a thorough investigation will be conducted and that the vandals will be found," Obermeister said, adding that the damage inflicted by the attack is estimated by 1.5 million rubles ($20,400).

City police officials told RFE/RL that a probe had been launched into the attack.

There were no injuries reported from the incident.

It is not the first time the building has been targeted. In 2015, when the synagogue was under construction, unknown assailants opened fire at the building with air guns.

In another attack during construction, unknown arsonists attempted to burn it down.

Pakistani children read the Koran at a madrasah in Karachi in November.
Pakistani children read the Koran at a madrasah in Karachi in November.

An investigation by the Associated Press has found that sexual abuse of children by Islamic clerics is widespread in religious schools in Pakistan, where many of the country's poorest study.

AP documented the cases of abuse through dozens of police reports, as well as interviews with law enforcement officials, doctors, and abuse victims and their relatives.

One victim, 8-year-old Yaous from the remote northern Kohistan region, described how the mullah at his Mansehra religious school grabbed his hand, dragged him into a room, and locked the door when the other students had gone out.

The boy was held prisoner for two days and raped repeatedly, until he was so sick the cleric feared he would die and took him to the hospital, AP reported, citing the boy, his relatives, and a doctor.

At the hospital, examinations by a doctor, Faisal Manan Salarzai, revealed brutal and repetitive assaults. The cleric has since been arrested.

Another victim, 11-year-old Misbah from Punjab, said she was raped by a cleric who taught religious classes to young girls in the village mosque.

"He suddenly grabbed me and pulled me into a nearby room. I was screaming and shouting and crying," the child recalled.

Misbah was rescued by her uncle, Muhammad Tanvir, who heard screaming from inside the mosque and smashed the door down, AP reported. The cleric was arrested but later released on bail.

Police officials told AP that sexual abuse of children by clerics was prevalent in Pakistan, but clerics continuously escape conviction as religious groups enjoy enormous clout and often accuse victims of blasphemy or defamation of Islam.

Deputy Police Superintendent Sadiq Baloch, in the country's northwest, said the victims' families were often coerced into "forgiving" clerics, fearing shame and stigma in the deeply conservative society.

There are more than 22,000 registered madrasahs in Pakistan, teaching more than 2 million children.

But there are many more unregistered religious schools that are typically run by a local mullahs in poor neighborhoods, attracting students with promises of meals and free lodging.

In Pakistan, there is no central body of clerics that governs madrasahs, nor is there a central authority that can investigate or respond to allegations of abuse by clerics.

The government of Prime Minister Imran Khan has promised to modernize the curriculum and make the madrasahs more accountable, but such an overhaul has yet to materialize.

With reporting by AP

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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