Pakistani Christian Asia Bibi asks France for asylum

Asia Bibi posing with French journalist Anne-Isabelle Tollet in Candada on January 28, 2020. (Photo courtesy by social media)
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Updated 25 February 2020
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Pakistani Christian Asia Bibi asks France for asylum

  • Her visit comes a few weeks after the publication of her book “Enfin Libre!” (Finally Free) in French.
  • Paris Mayor is to bestow an honorary citizenship certificate granted to Bibi by the city in 2014, when she was still behind bars

Paris: Asia Bibi, the Pakistani Christian woman who spent years on death row after a 2010 conviction of blasphemy, said Monday that she was seeking political asylum from the French government.
“My great desire is to live in France,” Bibi said in an interview with RTL radio, her first trip to France since fleeing with her family to Canada in 2018.
Her visit comes a few weeks after the publication of her book “Enfin Libre!” (Finally Free) in French last month, with an English version due in September.
“France is the country from where I received my new life... Anne-Isabelle is an angel for me,” she said, referring to the French journalist Anne-Isabelle Tollet, who waged a long campaign for her release and later co-wrote Bibi’s book.
On Tuesday, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo is to bestow an honorary citizenship certificate granted to Bibi by the city in 2014, when she was still behind bars.
She said she did not have any meeting scheduled with President Emmanuel Macron, but “obviously I would like the president to hear my request.”
In her book, Bibi recounts the nightmare conditions she was subjected to in prison until her release in 2018, amid an international outcry over her treatment.
The acquittal sparked fierce rioting in Muslim-majority Pakistan, where Christians are often the target of persecution.
She later fled with her family to Canada, where she has been living in an undisclosed location under police protection.
“Obviously I am enormously grateful to Canada,” Bibi said, adding that she now wanted to work “hand in hand” with Tollet to urge Pakistan authorities to free others imprisoned over the country’s anti-blasphemy laws.

The allegations against Bibi date back to 2009, when Muslim field laborers who were working alongside her refused to share water because she was Christian.
An argument broke out and a Muslim woman later went to a local cleric and accused Bibi of committing blasphemy against the Prophet Muhammad.
But despite her dramatic acquittal by Pakistan’s chief justice, activists warned that freedom for Bibi would likely mean a life under threat by hard-liners who have long called for her death.
Last May, she was spirited away to Canada, where Tollet was the only reporter to have met with Bibi since her arrival.
In her book, Bibi tells of the humiliating and horrendous conditions in prison, and the daily torments suffered by the country’s Christian minority.
She also recounts the difficulty of adjusting to her new life, and the pain of having to leave without seeing her father or other members of her family.
“Pakistan is my country. I love my country but I am in exile forever,” she wrote.


12 killed, 27 injured in suicide blast outside district court in Pakistani capital

Updated 12 min 8 sec ago
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12 killed, 27 injured in suicide blast outside district court in Pakistani capital

  • Attack comes amid surge in violence against Pakistan by Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan group
  • Islamabad says attackers operate from Afghanistan with India backing, Kabul and New Delhi deny

ISLAMABAD: At least twelve people were killed and 27 others injured in a suicide blast outside a court in Islamabad on Tuesday, the interior minister said. 

The explosion took place near the entrance of a district court in Islamabad’s G-11 sector while it was crowded with a large number of litigants.

“As of now, 12 people have been martyred and 27 have been injured,” Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi told reporters. 

“We are already treating the injured, our teams are in the hospitals already. We are providing them the best possible facilities.”

A security official who declined to be named said “Indian-sponsored and Afghan Taliban–backed proxy group “Fitna-ul-Khawarij” carried out the suicide bombing, referring to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) group that Islamabad says operates from safe havens in Afghanistan, with backing from India. Both nations deny this. 

The latest attack comes a day after militants including a suicide bomber tried to storm a cadet college in Wana, a city in the northwestern South Waziristan district, triggering a gunbattle that killed at least two of the attackers.

On Monday, Pakistani security forces said they had killed 20 Pakistani Taliban insurgents in raids on hideouts in the northwest region bordering Afghanistan as tensions between the two countries escalated. The army said eight militants were killed Sunday in North Waziristan, a former TTP stronghold in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, and 12 others were killed in a separate raid in the Dara Adam Khel district, also in the northwest.

Meanwhile, Pakistan and Afghanistan have blamed each other for the collapse of a third round of peace talks in Istanbul over the weekend. 

The negotiations, facilitated by Qatar and Turkiye, began last month following deadly border clashes that killed dozens of soldiers and civilians on both sides.

TP is separate from but allied with the Afghan Taliban and has been emboldened since the Afghan Taliban’s return to power in 2021. Many TTP leaders and fighters are believed to have taken refuge in Afghanistan since then. 

The Islamabad attack also takes place a day after a deadly car blast in India’s capital New Delhi killed at least eight and injured 20 people. An Indian officer said on Tuesday that police are probing the blast under a law used to fight “terrorism.”

Arch-rivals India and Pakistan frequently trade blame for supporting militant groups against each other. A militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir in April that killed 22 people, mostly tourists, sparked a four-day confrontation between the nuclear-armed neighbors in May that saw them exchange artillery, drone and air strikes before a ceasefire was brokered by the US.