Asia Bibi’s Lawyer says she is ‘healthy and safe’
By Michael Ireland, Senior Reporter, ASSIST News Service, answritermike@gmail.com
PAKISTAN (ANS, October 30, 2015) --
The lawyer of the only Pakistani Christian woman to be given the death
penalty for alleged blasphemy met her in prison last week, reporting
that she is safe and in good health.
According to an article by Asif Aqeel, writing for www.worldwatchmonitor.org,
the final appeal for Asiya Noreen, commonly known as Asia Bibi, is
pending before Pakistan’s top court, after the Lahore High Court turned
down her appeal last October on technical grounds. The mother of five
has been in prison since the summer of 2009, when she was arrested on
allegations of insulting the prophet of Islam.
Defense
lawyer Saif-ul-Malook told World Watch Monitor he was accompanied by
Asia Bibi’s husband Ashiq Masih on his Oct. 21 visit in the Multan
Women’s Prison.
Through
Malook, a prominent attorney and expert in Islamic law, Bibi had been
allowed to take the final appeal against her death penalty to the
Supreme Court in Islamabad in July 2015.
Malook
told World Watch Monitor that since early October several foreign news
agencies, including one from the Vatican, contacted him over news that
Noreen’s health was worsening. “After this I decided to visit the prison
and personally meet Asia, to ascertain if the news was correct,” he
said.
“Only
family of the inmate or the lawyer representing the convict can visit
the chamber, so Ashiq and I went together to see her. Inmates on death
row are separated and locked into an 8 by 10 feet chamber called a death
cell,” Malook said.
“There
are three death cells in this prison and Asia is the only death
convict, so two cells are empty. She has been given one servant who sits
outside the lockup for any help,” the lawyer said. “Asia is probably
the only prisoner in Pakistan who has been given a TV set in her cell.
She looked healthy and normal, but I still asked her if she suffered any
serious illness.”
“Asia
has totally denied she ever suffered any serious illness since 2009 in
prison. She became happy when I told her that she would soon be
released,” her lawyer said.
World
Watch Monitor said Malook stated the deputy-superintendent of police
was also present during his meeting with Bibi. “There are no men in the
prison, and one extra female police officer is deployed outside her
chamber so that her security could be ensured,” he said.
Masih
confirmed to World Watch Monitor that he had visited his wife with
Malook, and that none of his daughters accompanied them on this visit.
He could see “a glimmer of hope” on Asia’s face, her husband said.
Malook’s
account of Bibi’s health contrasts with reports, which began to surface
a year ago, that she had become seriously ill. Since that time, hard
evidence or on-the-record testimony about her condition has been scarce,
and what information has emerged has been inconsistent.
World
Watch Monitor stated that in October 2014, Agence France-Press (AFP)
cited an unnamed Pakistani government “official” as saying that Bibi
"was vomiting blood last month and was having difficulty walking." AFP
also quoted the noted Pakistani Christian activist Sardar Mushtaq Gill
as saying that Asia's "life is in danger because of her health." Yet the
news agency also quoted an unnamed "source close to the prisoner's
family" as saying "we were told that her health condition had worsened
at one time but she was recovering now."
World
Watch Monitor further stated that in June of this year, reports again
appeared with claims Bibi was vomiting blood and was almost too weak to
walk. Few of the reports contained first-hand information or original
reporting. Several, including a June 30 item posted by the UK-based www.Dailymail.com
, based their reports on an item posted on a website called The Global
Dispatch. The Global Dispatch, in turn, had relied upon a single source:
a web site called MasLibres.org, which is published by HatzeOir.org, a
Madrid-based nonprofit organization that says it is devoted to
human-rights advocacy.
Though
MasLibres has devoted significant attention to Aasiya Noreen's case,
the website currently does not contain any report that Asia is in ill
health. It had earlier hosted an advocacy visit to Europe by Ashiq
Masih.
In
fact, on Oct. 22, MasLibres published a more upbeat assessment
following a prison visit to Bibi by Joseph Nadeem, director of the
Lahore-based Renaissance Education Foundation. Malook, the attorney,
accompanied Nadeem on the visit, MasLibres reported. (It's not clear if
this was the October 21 visit reported above.)
"They found Asia Bibi in good health and state of mind," the article reported.
World
Watch Monitor went on to report there are also indications all is not
well inside Multan Jail. Open Doors International, a charity that
supports Christians who are under pressure because of their faith, said
this month that "people close to the case" have told church contacts in
Pakistan that the prison is an overcrowded, unsanitary "hell hole," and
that Bibi is in poor health.
Malook
had previously served as the prosecution lawyer in the murder case of
the former Punjab Govenor Salmaan Taseer, who was assassinated after
visiting Asia Bibi in prison and supporting her case. The governor had
called Pakistan’s blasphemy statutes “black laws,” calling for their
reform and supporting a presidential pardon for Asia Bibi.
Taseer
was shot and killed by Mumtaz Qadri, a 26-year-old member of his own
security detail, in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, on January 4, 2011.
Qadri shot the governor 27 times without being intercepted by other
police officers present at the crime scene. Then he threw down his AK-47
sub-machine gun and reportedly pleaded to be arrested so that he could
explain his intentions, to punish Taseer for opposing Asia Bibi’s
blasphemy conviction.
World
Watch Monitor explained that because of death threats from hardliners,
no lawyer would agree to represent Qadri’s prosecution. After months of
no representation, Malook took up the case. When the trial judge, Pervez
Ali Shah, convicted Qadri and sentenced him to death in October 2011,
the judge was threatened and finally sent to Saudi Arabia for fear of
his life.
However,
a recent Supreme Court landmark decision has upheld the judgement that
Qadri had no legal justification to take the law into his own hands and
reconfirmed his death sentence. This vindicated Malook's bold
prosecution of the case. However, it is this verdict that has provoked
the backlash against Asia Bibi by extremists.
Malook
said the Supreme Court hearing in Bibi’s case should begin sometime in
January or February 2016. He remains “quite hopeful” she would be
acquitted and released, he said. Citing “insufficient evidence” against
her, he has not found sufficient legal grounds against her under either
civil or Islamic law.
Main Image: Asia Bibi with Punjab Governor, Salmaan Taseer, who was assassinated in 2011 for supporting her case.
Image:1
) Asia Bibi with her husband and two daughters. 2) Bibi's final appeal
against her death penalty is pending at the Supreme Court of Pakistan
shown here. 3) Michael Ireland
About
the writer: Michael Ireland is a Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST
News Service, as well as a volunteer Internet Journalist and Ordained
Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and ASSIST News Service
since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. Click http://paper.li/Michael_ASSIST/1410485204 to see a daily digest of Michael's stories for ANS.
** You may republish this or any of ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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