Gulf News

I have no safety or security and I’m the easiest target. Anybody can kill me.”

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After saving Asia Bibi from the gallows in Pakistan, her lawyer says he is facing the wrath of extremists and wonders who will save him.

But despite the threats against him, Saif-ul-Mulook says he regrets nothing, and will continue his legal fight against intoleranc­e.

Mulook’s latest victory saw the freeing of Asia Bibi — a Christian woman convicted of blasphemy, who spent nearly a decade on death row — after the Supreme Court overturned her conviction Wednesday.

“The verdict has shown that the poor, the minorities and the lowest segments of society can get justice in this country,” he said immediatel­y after the verdict. “This is the biggest and happiest day of my life.”

Demonstrat­ions against the ruling erupted across the country hours later, with extremists calling for mutiny against the army’s top brass, and for the assassinat­ion of Supreme Court justices.

Blasphemy is a highly inflammato­ry issue in Pakistan, where even the slightest whiff of insulting Islam and Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) can incite vigilante mobs.

Mulook said he feels he is now a sitting duck with no security or escape plan. “I think I have absolutely no safety. No security and I am the easiest target. Anybody can kill me,” he said.

The defence of Bibi was just the latest in a long line of controvers­ial cases taken up by the barrister. In 2011, Mulook was the lead prosecutor against Mumtaz Qadri over the assassinat­ion of Punjab governor Salman Taseer — a prominent critic of the country’s blasphemy laws and supporter of Bibi.

Reprisal from extremists

Qadri — one of Taseer’s bodyguards — gunned down his boss in broad daylight, citing the governor’s calls for reform of the blasphemy laws as his motive. Mulook said he took on the case as others cowered, fearing reprisals from extremists.

His prosecutio­n resulted in the conviction and subsequent execution of Qadri, who was feted by extremists and later honoured with a shrine on the outskirts of Islamabad.

Mulook says his life has not been the same since; he rarely socialises, lives in a constant state of hypervigil­ance and has been inundated with threats. “If you conduct such cases you should be ready for the results and the consequenc­es,” the greying 62-year-old explains. But Mulook said the risks have been worth the reward.

“I think it’s better to die as a brave and strong man than to die as a mouse and fearful person,” he said. “I extend my legal help to all people.”

The verdict shows that the poor, minorities and the lowest segments of society can get justice in Pakistan. This is the happiest day of my life.”

Saif-ul-Mulook | Asia Bibi’s lawyer

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