Yahoo – AFP,
Waqar Hussain, 24 Nov 2015
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Pakistani
activists commemorate International Day Against the Death Penalty
during a
rally in Islamabad, on October 10, 2015 (AFP Photo/Aamir Qureshi)
|
A disabled
Pakistani murder convict was given a fourth stay of execution late Tuesday just
hours before he was due to be hanged, as rights activists slammed Islamabad for
a executions spree on track to see 300 deaths in under a year.
Abdul
Basit, a paraplegic who was convicted of murder in 2009, was scheduled to be
hung early Wednesday. His execution has already been harrowingly postponed
several times after rights groups raised concerns about how a wheelchair-bound
man would mount the scaffold.
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Pakistani
prisoner and convicted murdered
Abdul Basit lies on a hospital bed in
Faisalabad, on September 22, 2015
(AFP Photo)
|
The
statement said the president had vowed that "human rights will be
upheld".
"We
are very happy to hear the TV news that (the) president of Pakistan has stayed
the execution," Basit's mother Nusrat Parveen told AFP in response to the
last minute delay.
"We
also got confirmation from a jail staff," she said, adding that the family
hoped the stay would be extended beyond two months.
Earlier,
Basit's sister Asma Mazhar had issued a plea to the president to spare her
brother.
She told
AFP she had gone with her mother to see him on Tuesday for what they had
believed was the last time, and found him "helpless and quiet".
She said he
told them that authorities had come to measure his body and that it was an
"awful moment".
Pakistan
has executed 299 people since the death penalty was controversially reinstated
following a Taliban mass killing at a school in Peshawar last December,
according to Amnesty International.
"Pakistan
will imminently have executed 300 people since it lifted a moratorium on
executions, shamefully sealing its place among the world's worst
executioners," it said in a statement.
Forty-five
people were executed in October alone, Amnesty said, making it the deadliest
month since the moratorium was lifted.
No official
figures are available. The rights group Reprieve told AFP Tuesday that by its
tally the number of executions has just passed 300, while other local activists
said the figure was below 260.
![]() |
Pakistan
ended a six-year moratorium on the death penalty last year after Taliban
militants gunned down more than 150 people at a school in Peshawar (AFP
Photo/Aamir Qureshi)
|
"Pakistan's
ongoing zeal for executions is an affront to human rights and the global trend
against the death penalty," David Griffiths, Amnesty's South Asia research
director, said in a statement.
"Even
if the authorities stay the execution of Abdul Basit, a man with paraplegia,
Pakistan is still executing people at a rate of almost one a day."
Rights
fears
Pakistan
ended a six-year moratorium on the death penalty last year as part of a terror
crackdown after Taliban militants gunned down more than 150 people, most of
them children, at an army-run school in the restive northwest.
The massacre
shocked and outraged a country already scarred by nearly a decade of extremist
attacks.
Hangings
were initially reinstated only for those convicted of terrorism, but in March
they were extended to all capital offences.
Supporters
argue that executions are the only effective way to deal with the scourge of
militancy in the country.
![]() |
Pakistani
police stand above photographs of students killed during a 2014
Taliban attack
on a school during a ceremony in Peshawar, on November 16,
2015 (AFP Photo/A
Majeed)
|
But critics
say the legal system is unjust, with rampant police torture and poor
representation for victims during unfair trials, while the majority of those
who are hanged are not convicted of terror charges.
There is no
evidence the "relentless" executions have done anything to counter
extremism in the country, Griffiths said in the Amnesty statement.
Recent
research by the Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies also suggests that death
is no deterrent for militants who are "committed to dying for their
cause".
The Amnesty
figures suggest Pakistan is on track to become one of the world's top
executioners in 2015.
In 2014 607
people were put to death in 22 countries, according to Amnesty, though that
figure does not include China, where the number of executions is believed to be
in the hundreds but is considered by authorities to be a state secret.
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