Asia Bibi’s Family Appeal for Help over Blasphemy Charge
By Michael Ireland, Senior Reporter, ASSIST News Service answritermike@gmail.com
PUNJAB, PAKISTAN (ANS - Feb.4, 2015) – For almost
five years Asia Bibi, a poor, illiterate woman from Pakistan's rural
Punjab, has been on death row after being accused of insulting the
Prophet Muhammad, a charge she vehemently denies.
In a rare interview with Shaimaa Khalil of BBC News, Punjab, her husband has appealed for help from the international community.
The BBC explains that in Pakistan, the mere accusation of blasphemy
can be a death sentence. It is also enough to make the whole family a
target.
This is why Asia Bibi's family members have been in hiding for nearly
five years. Soon after her conviction, crowds took to the streets
calling for her death, some threatening to kill her if she ever got out,
the BBC said on its website www.bbc.com .
Asia's husband Ashiq Massih and her five children have been on the
run since she was arrested. He said the danger of someone killing any of
them hung over him every day.
"We get death threats," he said, looking anxious and weary. "We can't stay in one place for very long.
"We live in hiding. It's very hard especially for the children. They
can't settle down or study," he added. "It's not a normal life to be
constantly living in fear."
The BBC stated Asia's troubles began when she was picking berries in
her village of Itan Wali in Punjab. She had an argument with a group of
Muslim women when she went to get water from the well. They said the
water was unclean because a Christian woman had touched it.
Days later the women claimed she had insulted the Prophet Muhammad and Asia was pursued by a mob.
"They went to fields and beat her and tore her clothes. They beat her
in front of us," her 14-year-old daughter Esham said, trying to fight
back tears.
"We were crying, begging them to let her go and stop hitting her. They did that for almost one hour.
"They also hit me when I tried to defend her," Esham continued.
In the BBC interview, Esham said that at the time she could not
understand why this was happening to her mother, and was told later that
it was about blasphemy.
"I try to forget the way she was beaten and tortured that day," Esham said.
The BBC stated that Asia's story has generated a debate across
Pakistan about reforming the country's blasphemy law. But it is a very
dangerous issue here that many politicians prefer to avoid. Two
prominent politicians who spoke out against it were killed.
Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab, was shot by his own bodyguard
because he defended Asia and said she should be pardoned, and the killer
is now considered a hero by many in Pakistan. Not long afterwards,
minorities minister Shahbaz Bhatti was assassinated for speaking out
against the blasphemy law.
According to the BBC article, blasphemy is a capital offence in
Pakistan -- it often provokes violent attacks and, in many cases,
murders. At least 50 people accused of blasphemy were killed before
their trials were completed.
Pastor Arif Khokar, who has led a poor Christian congregation for
years in Punjab, was accused of burning pages of the Koran after a row
with a neighbor. He too vehemently denies the charge of blasphemy.
"I felt like I was going to have a heart attack," he told the BBC. "I
panicked when the police told me. I never thought this could happen to
me."
Pastor Khokar is now on bail -- unlike many blasphemy cases neither
he nor his family have been attacked but he says they live in fear every
day.
"We know the punishment of this accusation and what happens to people -- especially Christians. We live under so much tension."
The
BBC further stated the lawyers and judges who handle these cases are
often threatened and attacked. Asma Jahanghir, who has worked on
blasphemy cases for more than 20 years, says she has been targeted
regularly.
"Religious intolerance is something that people are taking advantage of, and the courts continue to be scared," she said.
"Because you can accuse someone of blasphemy, you then gather a crowd, threaten judges, threaten lawyers and spew anger."
Asma Jahangir told the BBC she thought it was unlikely that Asia Bibi would be pardoned because of the outrage it may cause.
Asia's husband said the blasphemy law had "destroyed our lives."
"I call on the international community to help. And I ask the Pakistani government to review this law," he said.
Asia’s daughters visit her from time to time, but seeing her in jail is never easy.
"We saw her last December," Esham said. "We asked the warden to open
the cell so we can hug her, but he didn't. My mother hugged and kissed
us from behind the bars. She cried deep from her heart."
Photo One: Asia's family now have to remember her through photos (Courtesy BBC website).
Photo Two: Blasphemy lawer Asma Jahangir says she has been threatened regularly (Courtesty BBC website).
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