Pakistani Christian woman on death row finally freed

Pakistani religious students rally for the implementation of a blasphemy law and against the acquittal of Asia Bibi, in Karachi, Pakistan. (File/AP/Shakil Adil)
Updated 29 January 2019
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Pakistani Christian woman on death row finally freed

  • Supreme Court dismisses review petition against Asia Bibi’s October acquittal
  • Bibi’s lawyer calls ruling “landmark judgment in the history of Pakistan”

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld the October acquittal of a poor Christian woman, Asia Bibi, in a landmark blasphemy case, clearing the final legal obstacle in her path to freedom after eight years on death row.

Bibi's case had put an international spotlight on the abuse of Pakistan's blasphemy laws in many instances to settle personal scores and unfairly target religious minorities. If allowed to walk free, Bibi is widely expected to seek asylum abroad, most likely in Canada. 

In October, the Supreme Court had acquitted Bibi of blasphemy charges but she has since been in hiding after religious hardliners held countrywide protests and filed a petition asking the court to review its decision. “This case does not have as many honest witnesses as it should have had ... and the petitioner has failed to point out any mistake in the court’s earlier verdict,” Chief Justice Asif Saeed Khosa remarked while hearing the case along with Justice Qazi Faez Isa and Justice Mazhar Alam Miankhel.

After the apex court freed Bibi last October, prayer leader Qari Muhammad Salaam had petitioned the court asking it to dismiss its earlier judgement and uphold the death sentence awarded in 2010. 

Salaam’s lawyer Chaudhry Ghulam Mustafa demanded during court proceedings on Tuesday that a larger bench of justices be formed to hear the review petition and should include Islamic scholars and clerics. 

“How is this a matter of religion?" the chief justice asked as he dismissed the petition.  

Hailing the apex court’s verdict, Bibi’s lawyer Saif ul Malook said: “This is a landmark judgment in history of Pakistan. She is a free person now and can go anywhere in the world she wants."

Malook said the verdict was a "loud and clear message" to people to stop leveling false allegations of blasphemy against innocent ones. 

Bib's ordeal began in 2009 when a dispute broke out between her and her Muslim coworkers at a berry farm because Asia had filled a jug of water for her colleagues. After the fight, the women accused Bibi of committing blasphemy by insulting the Quran and Prophet Muhammad and she was sentenced to death by a district court in 2010.

She spent eight years on death row until the Supreme Court finally acquitted her last year. But protesters poured into the streets in several Pakistani cities, forcing the government to take Bibi into protective custody on November 7.

“After nine years behind bars for a crime she didn’t commit, it is difficult to see this long overdue verdict as justice,"  Amnesty International’s South Asia Campaigner, Rimmel Mohydin, said in a statement. "But she should now be free to reunite with her family and seek safety in a country of her choice,” she said.


Pakistanis fleeing Iran describe strikes shaking ground under their feet

Updated 58 min 43 sec ago
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Pakistanis fleeing Iran describe strikes shaking ground under their feet

  • Nearly 1,000 students, businessmen and pilgrims have fled Iran since the war started out of a total 35,000 Pakistanis in the country

QUETTA: Pakistanis fleeing Iran described explosions and missile strikes across Tehran shaking the ground under ​their feet and engulfing buildings in fire and smoke in a city emptied of many of its residents. The conflict has widened sharply, with a US submarine sinking an Iranian warship off Sri Lanka on Wednesday and NATO air defenses destroying an Iranian missile fired toward Turkiye.
Governments have been scrambling to evacuate stranded citizens, with most of the region’s airspace closed due to the risk of missiles hitting passenger planes.
“I was in the classroom when a powerful explosion rocked our university building,” Hareem ‌Zahra, 23, a ‌student at the Tehran University of Engineering, told ​Reuters ‌after ⁠crossing Pakistan’s land ​border with ⁠Iran.
“We saw thick smoke coming from many buildings on fire,” she said, adding Tehran was under attack until the moment she left.

TEHRAN LOOKED DESERTED
Nearly 1,000 students, businessmen and pilgrims have fled Iran since the war started out of a total 35,000 Pakistanis in the country, Mudassir Tipu, Pakistan’s ambassador to Tehran, said.
“There are now serious challenges. As you know there is no Internet in most parts of Iran,” he said. Iran ⁠has retaliated with a barrage of ballistic missiles targeting Israel and ‌Washington’s allies in the Gulf, including Qatar, Kuwait, ‌the UAE, and Saudi Arabia, following US and Israeli ​air strikes that killed Supreme Leader ‌Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday.
Tehran has looked deserted since the conflict began, said Nadir ‌Abbas, 25, a student of Persian literature at a university in the Iranian capital.
“I saw a drone hit a basketball court where six girl players lost their lives.”
Reuters could not verify his account.

DESTRUCTION EVERYWHERE

Islamabad is walking a diplomatic tightrope as it attempts to maintain warming ‌ties with Washington while expressing solidarity with Iran.
Pakistan is home to the second-largest Shiite population in the world after Iran and ⁠being drawn into ⁠the conflict could lead to instability at home as well as complications evacuating its citizens.
“The first attack happened right next to my hospital,” said Sakhi Aun Mohammad, a student at Tehran University of Medical Sciences. After he reached the border, an Iranian friend called to check if he was safe, saying: “’Thank God, you have gone to Pakistan, all of you are safe, but your hostel has been attacked’.” A Pakistani diplomat who is still in Tehran said attacks took place every four or five hours, adding one missile struck a building next to his office. “At times you will feel as if something exploded right at your feet,” he said. “The last time ​I got out was at night. ​Buildings had collapsed, some others were on fire. There is destruction everywhere.”
He added: “It is almost like a ghost town.”