Las Vegas Review-Journal

Acquitted Pakistani woman living like prisoner

Mobs demand her death over claim of blasphemy

- By Kathy Gannon The Associated Press

ISLAMABAD — Aasia Bibi, a Pakistani Christian acquitted of blasphemy, still lives the life of a prisoner, nearly three months after her release from death row, awaiting a final ruling on her fate.

She spends her days in seclusion for fear of being targeted by angry mobs clamoring for her death. In her hideout, she longs for her children who were taken to Canada for theirsafet­y.

Pakistani security forces guarding the 54-year-old Bibi prevent her from opening a window in her hiding place, let alone go outside, a friend said.

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court is weighing a petition by Islamist extremists and right-wing religious parties that rallied against her acquittal and demand her execution.

Her case goes to the core of one of Pakistan’s most controvers­ial issues — the blasphemy law, often used to settle scores or intimidate followers of Pakistan’s minority religions, including minority Shiite Muslims. A charge of insulting Islam can bring the death penalty.

Just making an accusation is sometimes enough to whip up vengefulmo­bs,evenifthec­ourts acquit defendants. A provincial governor who defended Bibi was shot and killed, as was a government minority minister who dared question the blasphemy law.

Bibi’s ordeal began on a hot day in 2009, with a row with fellow farmworker­s after two Muslim women refused to drink water from the same container as a Christian. They demanded she convert, and she refused. Five days later, a mob accused her of blasphemy. She was convicted and sentenced to death in 2010 for insulting the Prophet Muhammad.

After eight years on death row, the Supreme Court acquitted her on Oct. 31.

At the time, her lawyer Saif-ul Malook, who has since been driven into exile fearing for his life, argued that the many inconsiste­ncies in the testimony of her accusers vindicated her. Bibi had always maintained she was innocent.

But the acquittal sparked nationwide protests, spearheade­d by the radical Tehreek-e-labbaik party, which sees the protection of the prophet as its single-point agenda. The party’s leaders — Khadim Hussein Rizvi and Mohammad Afzal Qadri — are in jail, charged with inciting violence, including with calls for Bibi’s public hanging and for the death of the three judges who acquitted her. They also called for mutiny in the powerful army and the overthrow of Prime Minister Imran Khan’s new government.

As street protests by extremists calling for Bibi’s death swelled, Khan’s government pledged she would remain in the country until the Supreme Court reviews the petition against her acquittal.

From her secret location, which authoritie­s maintain is for her own protection, Bibi is not allowed by Pakistan’s security forces to give interviews. Even her friends and those few who have access to her are afraid to be identified and agreed to talk to a reporter only on condition of anonymity.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? Aasia Bibi, a Pakistani Christian woman shown in 2010, still lives the life of a prisoner, although she was freed from death row more than two months ago.
The Associated Press file Aasia Bibi, a Pakistani Christian woman shown in 2010, still lives the life of a prisoner, although she was freed from death row more than two months ago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States