Blasphemy Law in Pakistan Claims another Victim
Death sentences meted out to Christians, Muslim under draconian statute
By Michael Ireland, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
GUJRANWALA, PAKISTAN (ANS, July 2, 2016)–
A Christian in Pakistan who reported an attempt to blackmail him for
allegedly blaspheming Islam’s prophet was sentenced to death this week
in a bizarre case riddled with police irregularities, according to
Morning Star News (www.morningstarnews.org).
In a report monitored by ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net),
sources stated that Anjum Naz Sindhu, the 65-year-old Catholic owner of
a prominent chain of schools in Gujranwala, received the death sentence
on Monday (June 27) following conviction for blasphemy – as did the two
men convicted of blackmailing him. Javed Naz, a Christian whose
affiliation was not immediately known, and Naz’s Muslim friend Jaffar
Ali, were also sentenced to death for concealing or otherwise handling a
recording of remarks that allegedly blasphemed Muhammad.
Morning
Star News reports that Naz and Ali told police that Sindhu had
committed blasphemy during a speech at Locus Science School last year,
which Naz said he recorded on his cell phone, according to a First
Information Report (FIR).
Sindhu’s
brother, Asif Sindhu, told Morning Star News that Naz, who worked at
one of the school’s that Anjum Sindhu owned, was using Pakistan’s
blasphemy law to take vengeance because Sindhu had fired Naz from the
school for leaking examination papers.
“Later
Naz, with the help of his friend Jaffar Ali, started blackmailing my
brother and started demanding extortion by claiming that they had an
audio recording in which he had committed blasphemy,” Asif Sindhu said.
“They uttered blasphemous words in my brother’s voice to get revenge for
taking action against Javed Naz and later started demanding extortion.”
Morning
Star News stated that as any unsubstantiated blasphemy accusation can
land an accused person in jail for months while awaiting trial under
Pakistan’s widely condemned blasphemy statutes, Anjum Sindhu on May 15,
2015 paid 20,000 rupees (US$190) in extortion money to the two men, who
then demanded another 50,000 (US$475) rupees from him.
After
consulting with different religious elders and friends, Sindhu went to
police and filed a complaint against Naz and Ali for blackmail, sources
said, as reported by Morning Star News.
A
source close to the family said Sindhu has never said anything
blasphemous or mocked Islam, given that he has successfully run a school
business for many years and was revered by area Muslims.
“He
took the extortion matter to the police because he was innocent and was
not ready to be blackmailed any further for something he hadn’t done,”
the source said on condition of anonymity. “He succumbed to the pressure
of the blackmailers because of the fear of death for himself and his
family members that comes with the charge of blasphemy in a country
where one doesn’t really have to prove the accusation.”
All
11 witnesses in the case were police officers, according to Sindhu’s
attorney. Police could have questioned Sindhu’s students or other
faculty members about the alleged remarks or about whether any such
speech took place, but they did not, attorney Arif Goraya said.
He
told Morning Star News that his client had also been fined 500,000
rupees (US$4,730) in addition to being wrongly sentenced to death. Terms
of the punishment have yet to be confirmed as the written verdict was
not yet released as of this writing.
Morning
Star News reported that after Sindhu filed the complaint, police
arrested Naz and Ali and recovered the 20,000 rupees from them,
according to the FIR, which stated that Naz and Ali told police that
Sindhu had committed blasphemy during a speech at his school, and that
Naz had recorded it on his cell phone. Police raided Naz’s house and
recovered the mobile phone and the memory card containing the alleged
recording.
Police
later booked Sindhu and Naz for committing blasphemy and recording it
on a mobile phone, while Ali was booked for demanding extortion from
Sindhu. The case was filed in an Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC).
ATC
Gujranwala Judge Bushra Zaman handed down the death penalty to Sindhu,
Naz and Ali for convictions related to blasphemy. Naz and Ali were
sentenced to an additional 35-year imprisonment and each fined 800,000
rupees (US$7,570) for extortion.
Goraya said that Zaman had handed his client a death sentence in a case “full of gaps and sloppy investigation.”
“During
the proceedings, I repeatedly brought to the court’s notice that there
is no direct evidence against my client, and that there are several gaps
in the investigation that make the entire process suspicious,” he said.
Goraya
said that a forensic laboratory report notified the court that the lab
lacked the equipment to make a 100 percent match of the voice on the
audio clip with that of Sindhu. The court thus made its ruling largely
on the basis of a transcript obtained from the audio recording, which
does not directly incriminate Sindhu, the attorney said.
He
added that Muhammad Shafique, a head constable who was the complainant
in the FIR and also the main prosecution witness, retrieved cell phone
memory cards on more than two occasions after the forensic tests and
might have tried to manipulate the evidence.
Three
mobile phones and two memory cards were confiscated from the accused,
and Shafique deposited them in the police station’s storeroom the same
day. Police then prepared the charges and moved all three men to jail.
“On
May 25, 2015, Shafique retrieved the two memory cards from the police
storeroom on the pretext that he was taking them to the forensic
laboratory,” Goraya said. “The lab transcribed the audio but stated in
its report that it lacks the equipment to effectively analyze the voice
patterns on the audio clip and of the main accused. However, the report
made a startling revelation – it said that it had analyzed three memory
cards, not two as mentioned in the FIR.”
According
to Morning Star News, the lawyer said that in his defense argument he
repeatedly pointed out that it was illegal for a police official, who is
also the complainant in the case, to keep possession of vital evidence
even if it were to be sent to a lab for analysis. Goraya said the judge
ignored his pleas that Shafique, the complainant in the case, had been
in possession of the alleged evidence more than once even after the
forensic report was obtained from the laboratory.
“Why
was the complainant allowed to retrieve the ‘evidence’ on his own?”
Goraya said. “The third memory card was ‘seized’ after the challan was
submitted, and that makes Shafique’s actions all the more suspicious.”
Since
Islam prohibits listening to blasphemy, few in the judicial process
actually heard the alleged remarks, he said. The attorney said that not
once had he or the court listened to the audio clip allegedly containing
the sacrilegious comments.
“As
a Muslim, my faith restricts me from listening to any kind of
blasphemy,” he said. “I did not insist that the court play the audio,
and I don’t think the judge would have played it anyway, keeping in mind
the sensitivities involving blasphemy.”
He said the judge based her verdict on the basis of the transcript of the audio clip.
“My
client, Sindhu, was convicted of committing blasphemy while Javed Naz
was condemned for intentionally concealing the alleged blasphemy for
monetary reasons, and thus being equally culpable of the crime,” he
said.
Morning Star News explained that as in most such cases, the death sentence will be challenged in the High Court.
Several
people in Gujranwala told Morning Star News that Sindhu and his family
were well-respected in the city because of their contribution to
education.
“Anjum
Sindhu has been serving this city for over 20 years,” said the source
close to the family. “The main branch of his school, which he was
himself supervising as principal, has a student body of over 2,000
children. He has two sons and three daughters, all of whom are highly
qualified professionals. It’s a shame that such a progressive Christian
family is being made to suffer like this.”
The
source said that the family had kept Sindhu’s arrest and detention in
the blasphemy case a secret as they didn’t want to risk his life.
Asif Sindhu said his brother never had any conflicts with Muslims.
“My
brother had thousands of Muslim students, and they never complained
about his behavior,” he said. “My brother registered a complaint against
Javed Naz and Jaffer Ali for demanding extortion, but instead he was
booked and later sentenced to death over a fake charge of blasphemy.
What kind of justice is this?”
Photo captions: 1) Christian believers protest death penalty in blackmail case (Courtesy Morning Star News). 2) Michael Ireland
About
the Writer: Michael Ireland is a volunteer internet journalist serving
as Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as an
Ordained Minister who has served with ASSIST Ministries and written for
ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
since its beginning in 1989. He has reported for ANS from Jamaica,
Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan, China, and Russia. To help partner
with Michael in ministry, log-on to: https://ACTINTL.givingfuel.com/ireland-michael
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