Dr Aamir Liaquat Hussain was found dead on Thursday at his house in Karachi. Liaquat was a religious scholar, politician and TV show host.
The cause of his death is still unknown. His daughter has requested that post-mortem should not be carried out while the police have asked for an autopsy.
Some people on social media are expressing their grief over his death while some others think that his death should not mean they start hiding his reality.
Have a look at how people are reacting to his death:
2018 میں عامر لیاقت نے پی ٹی ایم کے لاہور جلسے کے بعد میری بیوی کی تصاویر لگا کر انہیں سی آئی ایجنٹ قرار دیا جس کی وجہ سے میری نوکری بھی گئی اور کچھ عرصے کے لئے ملک چھوڑنا پڑا۔ لیکن ہماری دعا ہے اللہ ان کی مغفرت فرمائے اور آگے کی منزلیں آسان فرمائے۔ بے شک معاف کرنا بہترین عمل ہے
— Ammar Ali Jan (@ammaralijan) June 9, 2022
Everyone has forgotten Aamir Liaquat's sins because the only people he got killed were Ahmadis.
— Shehzad Ghias Shaikh (@Shehzad89) June 9, 2022
You don't want to speak ill of the dead? Don't but there's no need to make a hero out of a monster as well.
And no social media didn't kill him. It was an accidental death.
Read more- Aamir Liaquat’s ex-wife, daughter reach court for burial permission without post-mortem
Doesn’t matter what kind of person Aamir Liaquat was, stop bad-mouthing and joking about him after his death. It’s disturbing.
— Oshaz (@ThisIsOshaz) June 9, 2022
Some think we shouldn’t speak ill of the dead. But some negatives legacies should never be forgetten. #AmirLiaquat was Pakistan’s most prolific & influential televangelist. People who build their persona & influence off religion must be held by a higher moral and ethical code.
— Sahar Habib Ghazi (@SaharHGhazi) June 9, 2022
Aamir Liaquat is dead. Here’s hoping the era of hate, bigotry, moral policing, hypocrisy & misogyny dies with him. We can and we should speak the truth about the dead (and those living)
— Sana Saleem (@sanasaleem) June 9, 2022
Also I hate the way "dignity" generally used as a way to whitewash immense harm done to others, in this and in so many things
— Faiza S Khan (@BhopalHouse) June 9, 2022
Let's all agree that this is victim blaming, and Aamir Liaquat's victims had nothing to do with his death. He was no hero; his death doesn't absolve him of the harm and abuse he caused.
— leena (@Leena_Ghani) June 9, 2022
Agree or not, Pakistani men will always find a way to blame women for everything. https://t.co/qllfRo1XB9
I’m not going to say Aamir Liaquat’s death isn’t disturbing – but I will say – please do not make him a hero, and please do not start pinning the blame on someone else for his death. He was a grown man, fully aware of, and responsible for his own actions.
— Noor Ejaz Chaudhry (@noorejazch) June 9, 2022