July 28



PAKISTAN----executions

2 more murder convicts hanged across jails in Punjab


2 more convicts of murder were hanged at jails across Punjab on Tuesday morning.

Akhtar and Karim were hanged at Attock District Jail and Multan Central Jail.

Karim was sentenced to death for murder of a man following a robbery in 2003, while Akhtar was sentenced to death for the murder of man in December 1989.

Earlier, Anti Terrorist Court (ATC) on Monday once again issued the death warrants of Shafqat Hussain over the murder of 7 year old child.

Shafqat Hussain will be hanged on August in the central jail of Karachi. ATC issued the warrants of Shafqat Hussain for the 7th time.

It is pertinent to mention here that death execution of Shafqat Hussain, prolonged due to Human Rights commission claim that he was underage at time of committing the murder.

Capital punishment was awarded by the Islamabad High Court on May 11, 2015.

In 2004, Shafqat Hussain had killed a 7 years old child after kidnapping him. The stay order against the execution of death penalty has been discharged by the court

(source: thenewstribe.com)

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Britain accused of 'funding Pakistan death penalty' through MILLIONS given in foreign aid


The Foreign Office has been accused of 'enforcing the death penalty' in Pakistan by handing over millions of pounds in aid to the country's drugs law enforcers.

Pakistan is the biggest recipient of the Government's 11billion pounds foreign aid budget, with the Asian country benefiting from 338million pounds last year.

Anti-death penalty charity Reprieve says at least 13m pounds of that money is going to the country's Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF), which it said results in many being hanged for drug offences.

The charity wants the release of the Government's human rights checklist, known as the Overseas Security and Justice Assistance guidance, which must be completed before cash can be granted.

It made a Freedom of Information request for the publication of the secret documents but this was refused by the Foreign Office on the grounds it could hinder Britain's relations with Pakistan, as well as the work of UK Government's secret services.

The charity has made a legal appeal claiming there is a "strong and overwhelmingly compelling public interest" in the content of the papers.

Maya Foa, a director at Reprieve, said: "The British public deserves to know how much of its money is funding hangings in Pakistan, particularly as the country continues its aggressive execution spree."

Currently there are 8,000 on death row in Pakistan, with 23 Britons among those awaiting execution for drug offences.

Reprieve said 12.8m pounds given by the Government through the UN Office for Drugs and Crime is being used by the ANF to secure convictions, which the Pakistan government boasts are at 92 % of all cases.

The fund aims to stop the flow of drugs from neighbouring Afghanistan and has seen training given to Pakistan enforcement teams, as well as equipment.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: "It remains our longstanding policy to oppose the death penalty in all circumstances as a matter of principle.

"The UK and Pakistan have a shared interest in working together to tackle organised crime including the trafficking of drugs.

"The British Government is not aware of any case in Pakistan where UK counter narcotics cooperation has led to a death penalty sentence. We continue to review the situation as we have always done."

(source: express.co.uk)

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Christian Mother Asia Bibi's Potential Freedom Could Be 'Watershed Moment' for All Christian Victims Prosecuted for Blasphemy, Group Says


Imprisoned Christian mother of of five, Asia Bibi, is facing the death penalty after being accused of blasphemy in 2009 by angry Muslim women, who were upset that she drank from the same drinking water as them.

The potential release of Christian mother of five Asia Bibi, who recently saw her death sentence in Pakistan temporarily suspended, could be a "watershed moment" for all Christians falsely accused of blasphemy, a watchdog group has said.

"This could be a watershed moment as never before has a Christian blasphemy law victim had to appeal to the Supreme High Court, the majority are released at High Court. However the legal precedent that may be created as a consequence of a successful appeal could provide protection to future Christian victims faced with cases championed by aggressive, hatred fueled Islamic imams, while actual false eyewitnesses fail to appear during any stage of the court process," Wilson Chowdhry, president of the British Pakistani Christian Association, told The Christian Post on Monday.

"Moreover, a precedent could also limit the type of allegation that will be accepted by courts as a potential blasphemy. For instance, Asia Bibi's appeal focuses on the question she asked 'My Christ died for me, what did Muhammed do for you?' Despite 500 clerics in Pakistan believing the contents of the sentence was blasphemous, the majority of liberal imams outside of Pakistan believe the question exhibits little that could be construed as a blasphemy," Chowdhry added.

Bibi has spent 6 years in prison for that question, which she apparently asked of a group of Muslim women who were insulted that she drank from the same water supply as them.

After heavy international pressure on Pakistan, the Supreme Court temporarily suspended her death sentence last week, when an appeals case against her conviction began.

Chowdhry, whose group has been appealing for Bibi's freedom and has started a global petition for her cause, told CP that the case is set to be one of the most scrutinized legal procedures in Pakistan.

"The important issue that should be broached is how will the nation of Pakistan react to the potential release of Asia Bibi," he continued.

"A strong security team is required to protect Asia and her family as evidential animosity toward the family is immense. The family will no doubt flee Pakistan, most likely escaping to France where they have already been given honorary citizenship."

Bibi's family has been threatened by extremists, with clerics offering a bounty for her death if she is freed, as reported by Mail Online earlier in July. Christians and other religious minorities in Pakistan are often targeted not only by the government's blasphemy laws, but also by Islamic mobs who seek to take justice into their own hands.

The BPCA president said what will happen to all those who have falsely accused and threatened Bibi will also be very important.

"Will they be sentenced for perjury? Will the imam be stripped of his title and position and made to face his own court trial? Will any of those that ever attacked Asia physically or verbally be punished for their crimes? In a country where money rules and injustice is ubiquitous, I very much doubt justice will prevail in this situation," Chowdhry said.

"We can but hope that some focus on such matters will materialise, as the current impunity for crimes of this nature has to be addressed, and what impression counter arrests would make."

Bibi is also suffering from health problems while in prison, among all her other concerns, and is having trouble walking, her family has said.

Bibi's husband, Ashiq Masih, has said reports that she is on her death bed have been exaggerated, however, and revealed that she has since been treated by doctors.

Masih noted that his wife "smiles every time I visit her, she's so strong. Whenever we meet she asks for updates in the case. She asks me about the lawyer. She is so frustrated. But she has strong belief that she will be released."

The Christian mother's family has also been appealing for donations so they can visit her more frequently. Currently they are only allowed to see her once every 15 days, and have been denied by Pakistani authorities a request to see her moved closer to the family in Lahore.

Chowdhry noted that the legal fees for the court case have also risen as they have entered the next stage of the Supreme Court appeal, and is hoping the international community can help the struggling family.

(source: christianpost.com)

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The wretched march to the gallows


In many ways Abdul Basit's story is a tale of Pakistan's appalling desertion of its prison population. Once a person is pushed through the indomitable prison gates, he enters a black hole in the state's consciousness - denied all rights and dignity and left at the complete mercy of prison guards who are accorded unfettered powers to crush any signs of dissent and maintain order. The reality becomes particularly stark when one looks at the flaws inherent in Pakistan's criminal justice system. Infested with corruption and incompetence, Pakistan's police rely on torture and intimidation to procure damning confessions from the poor, mentally ill and socially marginalised to finish off their caseloads. Those who enter the dark abyss of our prisons are guilty mainly of being born on the wrong side of DHA, Gulberg and Cantt. The state is apathetic to the violations of their human dignity, as in its eyes, they always had less of it to begin with.

Abdul Basit was convicted for murdering a man during a heated altercation in 2009. True to standard police practice, the case against him was devoid of any proper investigation and comprised primarily of multiple accounts constructed by collaboration between the police and the relatives of the deceased. Abdul Basit maintained his innocence throughout the trial however he was awarded the death sentence and his subsequent appeals to the High Court and Supreme Court were rejected.

In 2010, while Abdul Basit was kept at Faisalabad jail, he began complaining of severe headache and an extremely high temperature. His family narrate that his headache became so severe that he would scream and bang his head against the wall for any form of relief. His anguish was only met with apathy by jail authorities despite repeated pleas from his family. It was discovered later that based on his symptoms Abdul Basit had contracted Tuberculosis (TB) meningitis in prison. Despite the knowledge that TB, if left untreated, could result in permanent damage, the jail authorities denied him any access to the requisite healthcare and simply confined him to a solitary cell to prevent an outbreak. It was only after Abdul Basit succumbed to a month of indelible pain and lost consciousness that he was transferred to DHQ hospital in Faisalabad.

At the DHQ, it was discovered that his condition had deteriorated so critically that he fell into a coma for 3 weeks. Eventually his family was informed that as a result of neglect and a lack of timely treatment he had contracted Tuberculosis (TB) meningitis. Over the course of thirteen months his condition plummeted - he became paralysed from the waist down and would suffer from long-term consequences of spinal cord atrophy for the rest of his living existence. Abdul Basit will never walk again. He has lost all control of his basic bodily functions. Various medical officers have classified his chances of recovery as 'minimal'. In 2011, a Medical Board at Services Hospital Lahore deemed that management of his medical condition "would be very difficult in jail".

However, Abdul Basit remains in prison. His days are spent confined to a cot in solitary confinement - no access to people or life outside the 4 walls of his death row cell. He is dependent on jail staff for his most basic hygiene, such as going to the toilet. He has even been denied access to a wheel chair with the result that he suffers from bedsores. He leads an undignified, inhumane and unhygienic life - failed by the government, prison system and the criminal justice system.

Furthermore, despite his permanent and life changing disability and humiliating imprisonment, Abdul Basit faces execution on Wednesday, 29 July. Under Rule 107 (iv) of the Prison Rules (1978) ill health is a ground for clemency from execution. However, the President of Pakistan in January 2013 rejected a petition from Abdul Basit's family requesting to commutation of his death sentence to life imprisonment on the basis of his disability.

Abdul Basit's case is surely unique due to his permanent disability. However, in many ways, it is the face of the state's executions since the lifting of the moratorium on the death penalty in December 2014 - cruel, vengeful and futile in its self-proclaimed quest to eradicate terrorism. Abdul Basit is not a terrorist nor does he pose a violent threat to society. He has already forsaken his dignity, freedom and liberty to the flaws of our inequitable justice system. Abdul Basit deserves compensation from the state for being subjected to the lack of care and discriminatory treatment during his time in prison rather than being pushed off to the gallows without any compassion and consideration of his permanent disability. However, the state is gearing up to take his life on Wednesday - another faceless number in the conveyer belt of civilian executions that will supposedly bring us closer to peace and stability.

(source: The Nation)






INDONESIA:

DFA, DOJ officials to meet with Indon execs over Mary Jane Veloso case


Officials of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and Department of Justice (DOJ) are scheduled to meet with their Indonesian counterparts on July 29 to discuss developments in the cases filed in the Philippines against the recruiters of Mary Jane Veloso, it was learned.

DFA and DOJ official will also discuss with Indonesian officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Law and Human Rights, and the Attorney General's Office the assistance available under the Treaty on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Among Like-Minded ASEAN Member Countries (ASEAN MLAT), the DFA said in a statement.

DFA Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs Jesus Yabes told InterAksyon.com this is part of the government's continuous commitment to provide assistance to Veloso.

Veloso is the Filipina mother of 2 who is on death row in Indonesia after being convicted of drug trafficking. She was saved from the death penalty at the last minute in April after President Aquino met with Indonesian President Joko Widodo at the ASEAN Leaders' Summit to appeal her case saying that Veloso is a victim of human trafficking.

The arrest of Veloso's recruiters, who are now in jail for the offense, was part of the evidence the Philippine government presented to Indonesia to convince them that she is a victim and not a criminal.

The objective is to get Veloso's clemency, said Yabes. But as of now, Veloso is still on death row.

Veloso's other fellow death row inmates, who included 4 from Africa, 3 from Australia, and 2 each from Brazil, France, and Indonesia, were executed.

(source: InterAksyon.com)

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4 nabbed, drugs seized in 2 cases


State Narcotics Criminal Investigation Department (NCID) has nabbed 4 suspects and seized drugs worth RM24,000 in 2 arrests under Section 39(B) of the Dangerous Drugs Act, 1952.

Its chief Supt Lukas Aket said his men picked up a man and a woman in their early 30s during the 1st raid at a residence in BDC here at about 10pm on July 23.

"The team also seized 60 ecstasy pills, weighing 18.84g, 360 erimin 5 pills (97.60g) and ketamin (8.95g). All these are valued at about RM12,000.

"We also confiscated a unit of Toyota Wish that is estimated at around RM70,000 and cash of RM1,103. The 2 suspects will be remanded until July 31," he told a press conference at the Media Centre of Kuching police headquarters at Jalan Badruddin here yesterday.

Lukas said the NCID raided another residence in Kota Samarahan near here at 1.39am on July 25, arresting a man and a woman, both in their 20s, and seizing ganja weighing 1,135.2g.

"We estimate the value of the seized ganja to be about RM12,000. The 2 suspects will be held on remand until July 31.

"Both cases are being investigated under Section 39(B) of the Dangerous Drugs Act, which carries death penalty by hanging if convicted."

From Jan 1 to July 26 this year, he said the department had seized ganja
weighing 3350.16g, syabu (1,631.44g - crystal), ketamin (485.58g), ecstasy (2,854.15g in powder and 1,109 pills), eramin 5 (1,059 pills) and nospan (15,159 pills).

"Of the 4,603 cases over the same period, 137 cases involved supply of drugs while 887 were cases of drug possession and the remaining ones were urine cases tested positive for drugs."

Of the total number of cases, Lukas said 1,656 had been brought to court, with 601 cases resulting in convictions.

He added that sentences for the 601 convicted cases involved jail terms between two months and 18 years as well as fines of between RM1,500 and RM7,000.

(source: theborneopost.com)






LIBYA:

Libya court sentences Kadhafi son, 8 aides to death


A Libyan court on July 28 sentenced slain dictator Moamar Kadhafi's son Seif al-Islam and 8 other defendants to death for crimes during the 2011 uprising.

Former intelligence chief Abdullah Senussi and Kadhafi's last prime minister Al-Baghdadi al-Mahmudi were also among those sentenced to death.

Seif al-Islam was not in court because he is held in the southwestern hill town of Zintan by militia opposed to the Tripoli authorities.

The trial, which opened in the Libyan capital in April last year, has been dogged by criticism from human rights watchdogs and an unresolved dispute with the International Criminal Court in The Hague over jurisdiction in the case of the Kadhafi son.

The 37 defendants were charged with crimes including murder and complicity in incitement to rape during the 2011 uprising that toppled the dictatorship.

The militia holding Seif al-Islam is loyal to the internationally recognised government which fled to the remote east last August when a rival militia alliance seized the capital and set up its own administration.

Seif al-Islam's sole appearances before the court have been by video link and there have been none since May last year.

Most of the other defendants are held in the capital, but some are held in Libya's third city Misrata which is loyal to the Tripoli authorities.

The UN Security Council referred the conflict in Libya to the ICC in February 2011 amid Kadhafi's repression of the popular uprising against his decades-old regime at the height of the Arab Spring.

Seif al-Islam is wanted by the Hague-based court on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

ICC prosecutors say that as part of his father's "inner circle", he "conceived and orchestrated a plan to deter and quell, by all means, the civilian demonstrations against Kadhafi's regime".

He has been held in Zintan since his capture in November 2011 despite repeated ICC demands for Libya to hand him over for trial.

Charges before the Tripoli court also included kidnapping, plunder, sabotage and embezzlement of public funds.

Human rights groups have expressed concerns about the trial, criticising the fact that the accused have had only limited access to lawyers and key documents.

(source: Hurriyet Daily News)

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Lawyer labels Gaddafi sentence 'judicially sanctioned execution'


The lawyer representing Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of the slain Libyan leader, before the International Criminal Court condemned as a "show trial" the proceedings leading up to the death sentence that was passed on him in Tripoli on Tuesday.

"The trial has been declared illegal by Libya's own justice minister," said British trial lawyer John Jones, who has led efforts to have Gaddafi brought to the international tribunal in The Hague, where he would not face the death penalty.

"The whole thing is illegitimate from start to finish... It's judicially sanctioned execution," he told Reuters.

Gaddafi faces charges at the ICC relating to brutal reprisals meted out to protesters taking part in the 2011 revolution that ended his father's decades-long rule.

The court, which has no police force of its own, relies on states to cooperate voluntarily with its arrest warrants. Life imprisonment is the heaviest penalty it can impose.

(source: Channel News Asia)






JAPAN:

Japanese 'haiku' killer sentenced to death


A convicted Japanese murderer who left a haunting "haiku" poem behind after his grisly deeds was sentenced to death on Tuesday.

The district court in southwestern Yamaguchi prefecture handed down the sentence 2 years after Kosei Homi, 65, was arrested for killing 5 elderly residents in a tiny mountain hamlet.

The victims, in their 70s and 80s -- who reportedly represented about 1/3 of the community's population --- were battered to death.

Prosecutors acknowledged that Homi suffered from a paranoid mental disorder but argued he was competent to stand trial.

Defence lawyers immediately appealed the sentence.

Japan and the United States are the only major advanced industrial nations that continue to have capital punishment.

In July 2013 police found 3 corpses in fire-gutted houses and subsequently uncovered 2 more bodies in separate homes.

Homi was arrested days later, being spotted dressed only in his underwear in mountains near the hamlet.

At Homi's house, a "haiku" poem was stuck to the window, which read: "Setting a fire -- smoke gives delight -- to a country fellow."

The haiku is a traditional Japanese form, a 3-line verse of 17 syllables in a 5-7-5 arrangement. It customarily evokes natural phenomena frequently as a metaphor for human emotions.

(source: Agence France-Presse)






IRAN----executions

11 prisoners hanged in Iran - 27 executions in past week


9 prisoners were on Monday hanged collectively in a detention center in the city of Karaj, west of Tehran.

Also on Monday 2 other prisoners, identified as Saeid Ganji and Firouz Nouri-Majd, were hanged in Iran's notorious Qezelhesar Prison in Karaj.

The hangings bring to at least 27 the number of prisoners that have been executed in Iran in the past week.

The 9 prisoners executed at dawn on Monday in the Karaj detention center were identified as Omid Mohammadi-Dara, Mostafa Ghafarzadeh, Omidreza Karampour, Shahriar Hassan-Zadeh, Hossein Afghan, Yareh Hassan-Zadeh, Sasan Salari, Meysam Hosseini-Nejad, and Amanollah Baluch-Zehi.

Faced with escalating popular discontent and unable to respond to the rightful demands of the majority of the Iranian people who are living under the poverty line, the religious fascism ruling Iran - dubbed the 'godfather of ISIS' by the Iranian people - is ramping up suppression.

On Thursday, Amnesty International said that the Iranian regime has executed an astonishing 694 people between January 1 and July 15, 2015.

"Iran's staggering execution toll for the 1st half of this year paints a sinister picture of the machinery of state carrying out premeditated judicially-sanctioned killing on a mass scale," it said.

Since mullah Hasssan Rouhani took office as President, more than 1,800 prisoners have been executed in Iran.

(source: NCR-Iran)


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