Asia Bibi to join her daughters in Canada soon

Saif-ul-Mulook, right, the lawyer of Pakistani Christian Asia Bibi, leaves the Supreme Court building after the court rejected the review appeal against Asia Bibi, in Islamabad on Jan. 29, 2019. (AFP)
Updated 30 January 2019
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Asia Bibi to join her daughters in Canada soon

  • Country has offered asylum to Pakistani Christian woman and her family
  • Duo had flown to Ottawa earlier this month

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani Christian woman exonerated in a blasphemy case after spending eight years on death row is set to fly to Canada where she will join her two daughters.

Pakistan’s Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld the October acquittal of Asia Bibi, clearing the final legal obstacle in her path to freedom.

“She will fly to Canada very soon to join her daughters who are already there, Saiful Malook, Bibi’s lawyer, told Arab News on Wednesday. “Yes, Canada has offered them asylum.”

Bibi’s daughters left Pakistan in secret and flew to Canada earlier this month after accepting an offer of asylum by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Religious hard-liners called for protests following news of Bibi’s imminent departure.

Shortly after the Supreme Court’s dismissal of a review petition, dozens of activists belonging to the ultra-Islamist Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan staged protests in cities across the country.

Scores of the protesters were arrested as authorities sought to restore calm. Bibi’s case has put an international spotlight on the misuse of Pakistan’s blasphemy laws to settle personal scores and target religious minorities.

Bibi was forced to go into hiding after her October acquittal when religious hard-liners staged nationwide 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 mistakes in the court’s earlier verdict,” Chief Justice Asif Saeed Khosa said on Tuesday.

Prayer leader Qari Muhammad Salaam had petitioned the court, asking it to dismiss its earlier judgment and uphold the death sentence brought down in 2010.

During court proceedings on Tuesday, Salaam’s lawyer, Chaudhry Ghulam Mustafa, demanded that more justices, including Islamic scholars and clerics, be formed to hear the petition.

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

Bibi’s ordeal began in 2009 when a dispute broke out between the 54-year-old farmhand and her Muslim coworkers at a berry farm after she had filled a jug of water for her colleagues. Coworkers accused Bibi of committing blasphemy and she was sentenced to death by a district court in 2010.

She spent eight years on death row until her acquittal her last year. After protesters poured on to the streets in several Pakistani cities, the government was forced to take Bibi into protective custody on Nov. 7.

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


South African diamond mining company says 5 trapped miners presumed dead and files for liquidation

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South African diamond mining company says 5 trapped miners presumed dead and files for liquidation

  • The incident occurred in the early hours of Feb. 17 at the Ekapa Mine in Kimberley
  • “This marks the end of 158 years of continuous diamond mining in Kimberley,” CEO Jahn Hohne said

JOHANNESBURG: Five miners who were trapped last week after a mudslide flooded a shaft remain unaccounted for and are “now presumed deceased,” the owners of the diamond mining company in South Africa said Wednesday, announcing that it had filed for liquidation and shut the mine.
The incident occurred in the early hours of Feb. 17 at the Ekapa Mine in Kimberley, the capital of Northern Cape province, when a sudden surge of water, mud and rock in minutes inundated an underground section of the mine, blocking access to its lowest mining level, around 800 meters (half a mile) underground.
The mine owners, Ekapa Resources and Ekapa Minerals, said despite rescue efforts that included drilling and assessments by specialist teams conditions were confirmed to be unsurvivable as tunnels were filled with mud and water with no signs of life. A search operation is ongoing.
At the same time, the owners announced the immediate closure of the mine where the incident occurred and petitioned the courts to be placed in liquidation.
The decision came after an internal evaluation found that, given the protracted worldwide diamond market downturn, exacerbated by the recent tragedy, the company is unable to continue meeting its financial responsibilities, it said.
“This marks the end of 158 years of continuous diamond mining in Kimberley,” CEO Jahn Hohne said in a statement. “A legacy the company acknowledges with humility and respect.”
The National Union of Mineworkers of South Africa (Numsa), considered the largest single trade union in South Africa, told the state broadcaster it was “shocked” by the move, which puts the jobs of about 1,200 workers at risk. The union said it would be meeting with its legal teams to discuss a course of action to possibly block the liquidation.
“The situation is very devastating,” Numsa Kimberley organizer Lerato Mohatlane told the SABC. “If the mine is indeed liquidated, it is clear that all the 1,200 workers will then lose their jobs.”
The Department of Mineral Resources and Energy said it is set to meet with the firm and be briefed on what has transpired and ways forward.
South Africa is among the world’s biggest producers of diamonds and gold, and the top producer of platinum.