death penalty news

June 7, 2004


PAKISTAN:

Frontier Post chief editor's death sentences commuted to life imprisonment

Reporters Without Borders (Reporters sans fronti?res) expressed relief 
today at the commuting of the double death penalty imposed on Rehmat Shah 
Afridi, chief editor of the Peshawar dailies The Frontier Post and Maidan.

Two judges of the Lahore High Court replaced them on 3 June with life 
imprisonment as Afridi continued to protest his innocence of the original 
hashish smuggling accusation against him by the ANF national anti-drug squad.

The press freedom organisation regretted that he had not been acquitted in 
view of the many irregularities during his arrest and trial. It called for 
an independent enquiry into the procedural aspects of the case, which has 
allowed the government to keep a newspaper editor in prison for the past 
five years.

Afridi was arrested on 2 April 1999 and accused of drug possession and 
smuggling after frequently criticising the ANF and former prime minister 
Nawaz Sharif.

The judges struck down the sentences of death by hanging imposed in June 
2001 on grounds that hashish smuggling was not punishable by such a 
sentence, the first time in Pakistan's history that it had been imposed for 
this offence.

During the High Court hearing, the prosecution presented a video showing a 
person resembling Afridi with ANF members disguised as drug smugglers. The 
Afridi person is heard to refuse an invitation to get involved in smuggling 
heroin. The court had criticised the police on 20 May for destroying 
material evidence used to convict him.

The latest developments support the contention of Afridi's family and 
Reporters Without Borders that the journalist was set up by the ANF (which 
is funded by the US government) in retaliation for his exposure of its 
corruption and abuses of power. His son Jalil has said he will appeal the 
case to the Supreme Court.

(source: Reporters without Borders)

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