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Pakistani Court to review woman’s blasphemy acquittal

4 Min Read
ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN - MARCH 26: Pakistani Christians hold cross during the protest against the demolition of Christian streets in Islamabad, Pakistan on March 26, 2014. Pakistani Minister of Internal Affairs Nisar Ali Khan explains Christian streets will be demolished from city center following that Pakistani Christians stage a protest. (Photo by Metin Aktas/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

Pakistan’s Supreme Court will on Tuesday begin a review of its acquittal of a Christian woman charged with blasphemy, the court reported on Monday.

The verdict had sparked days of protests over a case that has divided society and incited killings.

Asia Bibi, who spent eight years on death row, has been in hiding since the Supreme Court freed her in October, with religious hardliners calling for her death and demanding that the government prevent her from leaving the country.

Most reviews of Supreme Court verdicts are dismissed immediately, but the controversy, anger and fear surrounding the case have added an extra layer of uncertainty.

A three-judge panel, including new Supreme Court Chief Justice, Asif Saeed Khosa, is due to hear the case.

Bibi’s lawyer, Saif-ul-Malook, who fled to Europe due to fears for his safety in 2018, told Reuters he expected the case to be dismissed.

“They have filed the petition on flimsy grounds.

“They haven’t attempted to counter her release on constitutional grounds.

“God willing, she will have the decision in her favour tomorrow.

“She will be a free person to go anywhere she wants to,’’ Malook, who returned to Pakistan this week and will represent Bibi in court, said.

If allowed to do so, Bibi is widely expected to seek asylum abroad due to safety concerns.

In November, Canadian Premier, Justin Trudeau, said his country was in talks with Pakistan about helping her.

Bibi, a farm worker, was convicted in 2010 of making derogatory remarks about Islam after neighbours working in the fields with her objected to her drinking water from their glass because she was not Muslim.

However, she has always denied committing blasphemy.

The governor of Punjab province, Salman Taseer, was assassinated by his bodyguard in 2011 after speaking in Bibi’s defence.

Federal Minister for Minorities, Shahbaz Bhatti, was killed later that year after calling for her release.

The violence stifled debate on Pakistan’s draconian blasphemy law, which critics say is often abused and unfairly targets religious minorities.

Protesting members of the hardline Tehreek-e-Labaik (TLP) group, founded by supporters of Taseer’s assassin, blocked main roads in Pakistan’s biggest cites for three days after Bibi’s acquittal.

They called for the killing of the Supreme Court judges who freed her, urging their cooks and servants to murder them.

The TLP called off the protests after striking a deal with the government to put Bibi on an “exit control list’’, barring her from leaving the country.

The government later cracked down on the TLP, detaining over 3,000 activists and pressing terrorism charges against its leaders.

The TLP’s acting Chief, Shafeeq Ameeni, warned that the court panel should not make a “wrong decision’’.

“We will not tolerate an attack on the sanctity of our prophet.

“We don’t want the country to go up in flames because of a wrong decision,’’ he said in a video statement.

Bibi’s case has outraged Christians worldwide and dismayed moderate Pakistanis, though few dare to speak out.

“No one should be able to intimidate the Supreme Court into reversing a long-overdue ruling.

“Asia Bibi has been found to be innocent.

“She should now finally be free to be reunited with her family and leave the country if she chooses,’’ Omar Waraich, Deputy South Asia Director for Amnesty International, said. (Reuters/NAN)

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