Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
International

No Evidence, No Witness: Pak Supreme Court Releases Man After 18 Years

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Sep, 2019 07:41 PM
  • No Evidence, No Witness: Pak Supreme Court Releases Man After 18 Years


After being in jail for over 18 years for charges under Pakistan's controversial blasphemy laws, a death-row convict was finally acquitted by the country's Supreme Court due to lack of evidence.


A three-judge Supreme Court bench in Pakistan, headed by Justice Sajjad Ali Shah, on Wednesday released Wajih-ul-Hassan, lodged in Lahore's Kot Lakhpath jail, from the blasphemy charges, Pakistani newspaper Dawn reported.


A case was registered against Mr Hassan in 1999 for writing blasphemous letters to a lawyer. In 2001, a handwriting expert in his report said that the writing of the accused closely matched with the letters in question. Based on this, a court in Lahore convicted Mr Hassan and awarded him death sentence. The decision was later maintained by the Lahore High Court as well.


Under Pakistan's penal code, the offence of blasphemy is punishable by death or life imprisonment.


In its judgement on Wednesday, Pakistan's Supreme Court observed that the prosecution has failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the letters, which became the basis of blasphemy allegations against Mr Hassan, were actually written by him, and consequently rejected the case.


Pakistan's top court also noted that there was no direct witness in the case.


Last year, Pakistan's Supreme Court had acquitted Aasia Bibi, the first woman to be sentenced to death under Pakistan's controversial blasphemy laws, in a high-profile sacrilege case.


While deciding the case of the Christian woman, the Supreme Court had held that it was not for individuals or a gathering (mob) to decide whether any act falling within the purview of blasphemy had been committed or not.


It is the top court's mandate to make such decisions after conducting a fully qualified trial on the basis of credible evidence.


Blasphemy is considered a sensitive topic in Pakistan and those accused of it often spend long years of their life in jails.


Although the state has never executed anyone for the offence, at least 65 people have been murdered in Pakistan by mobs over blasphemy allegations since 1990, according to Pakistan-based think-tank Centre for Research and Security Studies.

MORE International ARTICLES

64-Yr-Old Sikh Man Parmjit Singh On Evening Walk Stabbed To Death In California

Parmjit Singh was attacked in Gretchen Talley Park in Tracy around 9 pm on Sunday. He died from his injuries, ABC News reported.

64-Yr-Old Sikh Man Parmjit Singh On Evening Walk Stabbed To Death In California

Caught On Camera: Burglar's Vehicle Stolen While He Was Robbing Store Across Street

The incident that took place around 6 am on Sunday was revealed by the Kennewick Police Department said in a Facebook post.  

Caught On Camera: Burglar's Vehicle Stolen While He Was Robbing Store Across Street

Twitter Can't Get Over This Pic Of Melania Trump And Justin Trudeau

The Picture Shows US First Lady Melania Trump Leaning Towards Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau For A Customary Kiss On The Cheek. Melania Trump's Husband, Us President Donald Trump, Stands By Her With Downcast Eyes. (Photo: Twitter)  

Twitter Can't Get Over This Pic Of Melania Trump And Justin Trudeau

Man Marries Both His Girlfriends at the Same Time Because He Didn't Want to Hurt Them

The ceremony took place in Airtarap, Kalimantan on August 17, Vice Indonesia reported.

Man Marries Both His Girlfriends at the Same Time Because He Didn't Want to Hurt Them

Watch: Woman Steals Stroller From Shop, Forgets Her Baby Behind

Three women were caught on camera stealing a stroller from a store. Their theft attempt, however, was foiled when one of them forgot her baby inside the New Jersey store. 

Watch: Woman Steals Stroller From Shop, Forgets Her Baby Behind

US Court Reduces Indian Woman Pallavi Macharla's Murder Conviction To Involuntary Manslaughter

A Middlesex Superior Court judge, Kenneth Fishman, said that the second-degree murder conviction a jury delivered in May against Pallavi Macharla, a 44-year-old mother of two, was not "consonant with justice".

US Court Reduces Indian Woman Pallavi Macharla's Murder Conviction To Involuntary Manslaughter