National Post

Freedom for woman accused of blasphemy

On death row in Pakistan for eight years

- SALMAN MASOOD

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN • She has been isolated on death row for eight years after an accusation with little evidence that she had spoken against the Prophet Muhammad.

A prominent governor who spoke out in her defence was killed by his own bodyguard, and mobs have rallied against the suggestion that leniency might be in order.

But for the first time since her arrest in 2009, Asia Bibi, the Christian Pakistani woman whose blasphemy conviction the following year rallied internatio­nal condemnati­on of a law that has inspired violence again and again, is free.

Pakistan’s Supreme Court on Wednesday acquitted her and ordered her “released forthwith,” in a rare ruling against a blasphemy verdict.

The ruling, by a threemembe­r bench of the court, was announced by Chief Justice Mian Saqib Nisar.

“This is a landmark verdict,” said Omar Waraich, the deputy South Asia director at Amnesty Internatio­nal. “Despite her protest of innocence, and despite the lack of evidence against her, this case was used to rouse angry mobs, justify the assassinat­ions of two senior officials, and intimidate the Pakistani state into capitulati­on.

“Justice has finally prevailed.”

Waraich added, “The message must go out that the blasphemy laws will no longer be used to persecute the country’s most vulnerable minorities.”

But given the realities in Pakistan, where last year a mob lynched a student on just the rumour that he had committed blasphemy, Bibi is likely to spend the rest of her life as a marked woman.

She was in an undisclose­d location for her safety, and her lawyer said he expected that she would soon leave the country

The country braced for violence after the verdict was announced. Protests erupted in several cities, mostly by supporters of Tehreek-e-Labbaik, the religious party of the firebrand cleric Khadim Hussain Rizvi.

Pir Muhammad Afzal Qadri, one of the leaders of Tehreek-e-Labaik, told supporters in Lahore, the capital of Punjab province, that the three justices who delivered the verdict were risking death. He also called for the removal of the Pakistan army chief, Qamar Javed Bajwa.

Protesters in Islamabad blocked one of the main highways that connect the capital to the neighbouri­ng city of Rawalpindi. They also burned tires and chanted slogans against the decision.

In the southern port city of Karachi, hundreds of members of Tehreek-eLabbaik disrupted traffic at intersecti­ons.

“They’ve made a mockery of Islam with this verdict, and we will hold them accountabl­e,” said protester Saqib Ali, 30. “Her freedom means all others who want to say anything against Islam know they will be protected by the courts.”

Protests also broke out in smaller cities across Punjab.

On Wednesday night, Prime Minister Imran Khan briefly addressed the nation, urging people not to be provoked by a “small section of society” and saying his government would not tolerate disruption of normal life.

“Do not take the state to a point where it has no option but to take action,” Khan said.

Bibi’s case has drawn worldwide condemnati­on and calls for overturnin­g Pakistan’s blasphemy law, which in effect has been used by extremists as a bludgeon against religious minorities.

Bibi, a former farm worker in her early 50s who has five children, found herself at the centre of the issue in June 2009 in Ittan Wali, a dusty farming village.

On a hot summer day, Bibi had gone to pick berries with her Muslim co-workers. She brought water for them on the orders of a local landlord, but the Muslim women refused to touch the water bowl.

A bitter argument ensued, each side presenting a different version of the verbal exchange. Muslims said Bibi had uttered vile abuses against Islam and the Prophet Muhammad.

Bibi insisted she had not and that she was the victim of false accusation­s prompted by bigotry. She was dragged to a local police station and charged with blasphemy, and until Wednesday remained in jail.

Blasphemy remains a highly combustibl­e issue in Pakistan. The blasphemy law prescribes a death sentence for anyone convicted of insulting Islam or the Prophet Muhammad. But critics say the law has been mostly misused, often to settle personal vendettas and property disputes.

Religious minorities are especially vulnerable to such accusation­s, and people who have advocated for changes in the blasphemy law have met with violence.

In 2011, Salmaan Taseer, the governor of Punjab province and an outspoken

DO NOT TAKE THE STATE TO A POINT WHERE IT HAS NO OPTION.

secular politician who had campaigned for Bibi’s release and changes in the country’s blasphemy laws, was shot and killed by his police bodyguard outside a café in an upscale area of Islamabad.

Two months later, Shahbaz Bhatti, the minister of minorities and the only Christian cabinet minister in the Pakistani government, was shot and killed outside his home in Islamabad after he also called for changes to the blasphemy law.

“Today has wiped away so much pain. It marks a beautiful end to a senseless and horrific saga,” Shehrbano Taseer, Salmaan Taseer’s daughter, said in an interview after Bibi was acquitted.

 ?? AFP / DIRECTORAT­E GENERAL PUBLIC RELATIONS (DGPR) PUNJAB / FILES ?? Asia Bibi applies her thumb print to appeal papers filed against her death sentence for blasphemy charges in 2010. Blasphemy remains a highly combustibl­e issue in Pakistan, with the law prescribin­g a death sentence for anyone convicted of insulting Islam or the Prophet Muhammad.
AFP / DIRECTORAT­E GENERAL PUBLIC RELATIONS (DGPR) PUNJAB / FILES Asia Bibi applies her thumb print to appeal papers filed against her death sentence for blasphemy charges in 2010. Blasphemy remains a highly combustibl­e issue in Pakistan, with the law prescribin­g a death sentence for anyone convicted of insulting Islam or the Prophet Muhammad.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada