What's up in Pakistan these days?

A while back some attention was drawn to Pakistan due to the death penalty verdict in an blasphemy case against Aasia Noreen. A short while thereafter, Salmaan Taseer, the governor of Punjab, was assasinated after he spoke up in her defense. What's happened in the time since then?

Overall it doesn't look good as a followup article by Time entitled Adding Insult to Injury: The Abduction of Shahbaz Taseer made clear:

In the ensuing months, not only has Qadri evaded conviction, but the Taseer family has also endured a series of further threats. Despite Qadri's confession, the court has convened only fitfully, dragging out the trial. "The government set a very bad precedent in the aftermath of Salmaan Taseer's death by not seeking to hold his murderer accountable," says Ali Dayan Hasan, Pakistan director for Human Rights Watch. "There has been no movement on the case, and the failure to prosecute and convict the self-confessed murderer is a sign of both incompetence and an appeasement of extremists." It is this form of surrender, Hasan says, that emboldens further lawlessness in Pakistan.