Security Increased for Asia Bibi following Execution of Islamist Assassin in Pakistan
Intelligence reports indicate conspiracy to kill her in prison
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
LAHORE, PAKISTAN (ANS -- March 8, 2016)
-- Morning Star News is reporting that fears are growing over the
security of the first Christian woman in Pakistan sentenced to death for
“blasphemy” following the execution of Mumtaz Qadri, who assassinated
her biggest advocate.
Qadri
was executed by hanging on Feb. 29 for the Jan. 4, 2011 assassination
of Punjab Gov. Salmaan Taseer, who had criticized Pakistan’s blasphemy
laws and advocated for the release of Asia Bibi. She has been on death
row since she was convicted in 2010 of blaspheming during an argument
with a Muslim woman over a bowl of water.
A senior Punjab government official confided to the Pakistan correspondent of Morning Star News (http://morningstarnews.org)
that Ms. Bibi’s security had been beefed up following intelligence
reports that Islamist groups are conspiring to get her killed inside
prison to avenge the hanging of Qadri. Taseer had called the country’s
controversial blasphemy statute “a black law” and demanded freedom for
the Christian mother of two children and stepmother to three others.
Speaking
on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak to
media, the senior government source said that there was already a bounty
on Asia Bibi’s head of approximately 50 million rupees (US$$471,000),
and that now that Islamist groups were calling for her swift execution,
the government was exercising extreme caution to protect her.
“The
government is doing its best to keep Asia Bibi safe,” the official
said. “Only her husband is allowed to meet her in jail, and she has been
told to cook her own food to prevent any attempt at poisoning her
meals. All guards deployed for her security have been carefully vetted
by intelligence agencies and other security outfits to ensure that they
are not extremists in their belief.”
He added that the government would not succumb to Islamists’ pressure at any cost.
“Mumtaz
Qadri’s hanging is a message to all those who take the law into their
own hands in the name of religion,” the official said.
Islamic
extremists feted Qadri, showered with rose petals at his trial, as a
hero and martyr, and his funeral last week brought up to 150,000 people
into the streets of Rawalpindi, many chanting for Asia Bibi to be
hanged.
On
Thursday (March 3, 2016), the chief cleric of Islamabad’s
ultra-extremist Lal Masjid, Maulana Abdul Aziz, called on the government
to execute “the blasphemer Asia Bibi as soon as possible and not bow to
international pressure.”
Islamist pressure is growing every day, said a Christian activist who requested anonymity.
“The
other day gold traders in Lahore announced that they would weigh
Qadri’s father in gold on March 27, the day the assassin’s 40-day
mourning completes, to acknowledge his service to Islam and its
prophet,” the activist said. “I believe that the underlying message for
Islamist youth is that their families will be taken care of properly if
they kill any alleged blasphemer, particularly Asia.”
Much prayer is needed for Asia and other victims of the blasphemy law, he said.
“You
never know, but the increasing pressure on the government could also
have an effect on the hearing of her appeal in the Supreme Court,” he
added.
Asia Bibi’s lawyer, Saiful Malook, said she is being held in isolation and under strict security.
“But calls for her speedy execution have increased the risk to her life manifold,” he said.
Morning
Star News went on to say, “Pakistan has yet to execute anyone convicted
of blasphemy, but anyone charged or accused of insulting Islam risks a
violent death at the hands of vigilantes. A Christian laborer and his
wife were thrown into the furnace of a brick kiln in 2014 after being
wrongly accused of throwing pages of the Quran into the garbage.
“Critics,
including European governments, assert the blasphemy laws are misused,
with hundreds languishing in jails under false charges that could see
them face fines, life imprisonment or death by hanging.”
Concerns
for Bibi’s safety come as a Pakistani Taliban suicide bomber on Monday
(March 7) detonated explosives in a courthouse in Charsadda, in Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa Province, killing at least 17 people, including policemen
and a woman. The Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan claimed responsibility,
saying in a statement that the attack was carried out to “avenge” the
execution of Qadri.
Most
of those killed were from the Barelvi movement within Islam, a
relatively moderate group said to oppose violence, though Qadri’s
execution had also upset Barelvis. No Christians were reported to have
died in the attack.
Surge in Blasphemy Cases
Morning
Star News stated that an alliance of hundreds of lawyers is behind a
rise in prosecutions of blasphemy cases in Punjab, according to a recent
report.
The
alliance, Tehreek-e-Khatam-e-Nabuvat (Movement for the Finality of the
Prophethood), offers free legal advice to complainants and has packed
courtrooms with representatives, a tactic critics say is designed to
help it gain convictions.
The
stated mission of the Khatm-e-Nubuwwat lawyers’ forum and its leader,
Ghulam Mustafa Chaudhry, is uncompromising: to use its expertise and
influence to ensure that anyone insulting Islam or its prophet,
Muhammad, is charged, tried and executed.
Since
Khatam-e-Nubuwwat was founded 15 years ago, the number of criminal
blasphemy cases filed in Punjab, the group’s home base and Pakistan’s
most populous province, tripled to 336 by 2014, according to police
figures. It fell to 210 in 2015 as stricter provincial rules were
applied, but critics said the number was still too high.
The
same group prosecuted Asia Bibi and later defended Qadri during his
trial. The Islamist lawyers are now rallying religious groups to call
for Asia Bibi’s execution.
Napolean
Qayyum, a Christian rights activist, told Morning Star News that he
wouldn’t be surprised if the forum’s lawyers storm the Supreme Court
during the hearing of Asia’s appeal against her death sentence.
“Fear
and intimidation is the extremists’ greatest weapon, and they might use
such tactics to intimidate the judges and pressure them into upholding
Asia’s execution,” he said, adding that fears for Bibi’s security inside
the prison were well founded as thousands of Qadri’s supporters are
baying for her blood to “avenge” their hero’s death.
“We
just hope that the government and the court do not cower under
Islamists’ pressure,” he said. “Asia has been suffering in jail for
nearly six years; it’s about time that she is judged fairly by the
court. We urge the government to take notice of the provocative
announcements being made by religious groups. Inciting people to resort
to violence is a criminal offense, and the government must not spare
religious leaders who are encouraging Muslim youths to follow in Qadri’s
footsteps and kill ‘blasphemers.’”
Photo
captions: 1) Asia Bibi on death row in Pakistan. 2) Mumtaz Qadri.
(Pakistan Today). 3) Salman Taseer with Asia Bibi, a meeting that is
believed to have cost him his life. 4) Dan Wooding with his award from
the British Pakistan Christian Association.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary
parents, and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma,
to whom he has been married for more than 52 years. They have two sons,
Andrew and Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is
the founder and international director of ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints
in Strategic Times) and the ASSIST News Service (ANS), and is also the
author of some 45 books, the latest of which is Mary, My Story from
Bethlehem to Calvary (http://marythebook.com).
He has received a special award from the British Pakistan Christian
Association for his reporting on persecution of Christians in Pakistani.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar