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Doctor faces death row for talk in Pak on Mohammad

Doctor faces death row for talk in Pak on Mohammad

Author:
Publication: The Deccan Herald, www.deccan.com
Date: November 19, 2000

A doctor and a teacher at a medical college in Islamabad, Younus Shaikh, is in prison facing the death penalty under the blasphemy laws of the land.  He was arrested by the police on October 4 for pointing out that Mohammed became a Prophet at the age of 40, and till then his parents were not Muslims.

Shaikh was booked under the dreaded Section 295-C (blasphemy) of the Pakistan Penal Code.  Blasphemy is a non-bailable offence, and attracts the death penalty.  Chief Executive General Pervez Musharraf had sought to improve the law by suggesting a small amendment but had to withdraw following pressure from the conservative sections of society.  When asked about this at a media conference in Islamabad earlier this year, he did not agree with the contention that he had succumbed to fundamentalist pressure saying his had been just a "technical" suggestion and had been withdrawn because it did not withstand legal scrutiny.

Shaikh, 45, is the founder President of "Enlightenment", a Pakistan-based organisation attached to the International Humanist and Ethical Union.  This organisation takes up issues as varied as support for the Bangladesh writer Taslima Nasreen who was forced by fanatics to leave her country, and support in writing for US President Bill Clinton when he was in the midst of the Monica Lewinsky controversy.

The doctor was produced before the court on October 19 but was without a lawyer.  Lawyers are often intimidated by the fanatics and are too scared to represent persons accused of blasphemy.  It is also a well-known fact that judges too are not very keen to try such cases in their courts, and give a ruling that runs counter to the charges framed against an individual by the police.

According to information available here, a group of clerics representing the Majlis-i-Khatam-i-Nabuwat were present in the court to ensure that the case against Shaikh did not fall through.  His glasses were reportedly broken in a scuffle within the court room, and he was not allowed to speak to anybody.  A local Urdu newspaper Khabrain has been carrying out a major campaign against Shaikh, demanding the death penalty for him.

The blasphemy law, experts point out, has a history of abuse and is often used to settle personal scores as a case can be filed even by those who were not witness to the alleged statements or actions.  It is reported that in the doctor's case a complaint was made to the fanatic organisations by a disgruntled student one Muhamir Asghar Khan.  A cleric, Maulana Abdur registered the case in Islamabad's Margalla police station.  Section 295-C empowers a police officer to arrest the person or persons without even having to obtain a warrant from a judicial magistrate.  Human rights activists point out that those undergoing trial under the blasphemy law are victims of police violence in custody or attacks by religious zealots in the court rooms.

The Roman Catholic Bishop of Faizalabad Bishop John Joseph had killed himself in protest in front of the sessions court of Sahiwal on May 5, 1998 sending shock waves through the liberal community in Pakistan and the world.  It is also pointed out that blasphemy in Islam is punished different and more severely than blasphemy in other religions.  Musharraf 's decision to drop an amendment to the blasphemy law seeking to make the police less powerful and more accountable in making arrests had generated a storm of protest amongst the fundamentalist sections.

It was, however, supported by a large number of academics, journalists and other professionals who were visibly upset about the General's decision to succumb to fundamentalist pressure.  Opinion was divided largely between those who felt that the Chief Executive could not get out of the conservative stranglehold, and others who insisted it was a "strategic retreat." Significantly the mainstream media has not taken up the issue.
 


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