OpenHeaven.com






Home   |   Contact Us   |   About Us



Home


>
Forums



Active Topics



Member List



Search



Register



Log In



Help



News



Free Download
Books & Videos




Articles



Links
Kingdom Revival
House Church
Market Place




Networking



Prayer



Library



Old Reports



Audio/Video
Live Webcasts




Contact Us



About Us




OpenHeaven.com
DIGEST ARCHIVE
by Article Titles
and Date


KINGDOM
GROWTH GUIDES


Ron's Newest Book
END OF THIS AGE
God's Intervention
on Planet Earth
Free Download


VOICE of
PROPHESY
FORUM


Kingdom
Prophetic
ARTICLES by
Ron McGatlin

RON'S KINGDOM
BOOKS
Free Download

PAT BOON'S
Fatherhood
Message and
Communion

Watch This
Powerful 2 min
Video

Baptized With
HOLY SPIRIT
AND FIRE

Holy Spirit
Filling/Baptism

Holy Spirit
Power
 

Deliverance
Ministry

VIDEO
Supernatural
Deliverance
Nick
Griemsmann

Hearing God

Deeper
Spiritual Life

RaisingThe
Dead


Billy Graham's
Message to
America - Video

How I Escaped
the
Mormon Temple



TOP NEWS - Worldwide Kingdom/Revival NEWS
OpenHeaven.com Forum : TOP NEWS - Worldwide Kingdom/Revival NEWS
Subject Topic: Asia Bibi: A life hanging in the balance - Asia Bibi Death Sentence Appeal Cancelled Again Post Reply Post New Topic
Author
Message
<< Prev Topic | Next Topic >>
News Room
Admin Group
Admin Group


Joined: 07/25/2004
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 6560
Posted: 05/28/2014 at 5:41pm | IP Logged Quote News Room

Asia Bibi Death Sentence Appeal Cancelled Again

By Jeremy Reynalds
Senior Correspondent for ASSIST News Service

PAKISTAN (ANS) -- Pakistani Christian woman Asia Bibi's Tuesday appeal hearing on her death sentence for blasphemy was again cancelled-for the fifth time. No new hearing date has been set.

 

Asia Bibi

According to a story by Cath Martin for the online news site Christian Today, Bibi's four previous hearings were also cancelled at the last minute by the court.

Bibi, a mother of five, has been in prison since being sentenced to death for blasphemy in 2010. The accusation followed a heated dispute with Muslim colleagues.

Blasphemy is a serious crime in Muslim-majority Pakistan and carries the death sentence, but human rights groups say the charges are often trumped up as a means of settling personal scores and vendettas.

Anyone accused of blasphemy in Pakistan faces threats to their life from extremists. Relatives often have to go into hiding to escape the same fate, and being behind bars doesn't make the accused any safer.

Christian Today reported that Shahid Khan, vice-chairperson of the Glasgow-based Global Minorities Alliance, said extremists "sometimes march into their prison cell and kill them while the guards turn a blind eye."

The authorities then record the death as being down to "bad healt h," or just say that the accused was found "mysteriously dead."

The most recent example of a blasphemy accused falling victim to an extra-judicial killing is 65-year-old Khalil Ahmed, a member of the Ahmadiyya Muslim community, who was shot dead by a school boy on May 16 while in police custody.

"One cannot help but wonder how a school boy was able to get access to a prison cell, let alone a gun?" said Khan, adding that the police had most likely colluded in his murder by failing to search the boy, or by granting him access despite carrying a weapon.

"The boy, undoubtedly coerced by others, committed an act of self-administered justice thinking that he is doing a favor to the religious ideology to which he must have been indoctrinated, in a hope to receive praise from the rest of the fold," said Khan.

Christian Today said Khan fears Bibi's life is "hanging in the balance." He noted that one cleric has put forward a reward of 500,000 Pakistani Rupees, (£3,700, $5,800) for anyone who ends her life.

Kha n is anxious that the hearing scheduled for Tuesday should not fall through like all the others. However, the courts are under pressure from extremist and fundamentalist groups.

"The efficiency of any democratic state rests in the institutions that exist to provide unbiased and impartial services to its citizens regardless of their background. Ironically, Pakistan courts succumb to the pressure to provide justice to those accused of blasphemy," he said.

Prime Minister David Cameron raised the human rights issue with Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif during his recent visit to the UK, but Khan is sceptical international pressure will be enough to change things for Pakistan's minorities.

In the meantime, Christian Today reported, Pakistan's religious minorities live out their lives with the constant risk of a false blasphemy accusation.

Khan said there has been a "spike" in blasphemy cases recently. He quoted a recent US Commission on International Religious Freedom report, which states there are cur rently 14 people on death row for blasphemy in Pakistan and another 19 serving life sentences.

While clerics freely incite hatred against minorities with their preaching, Khan said Pakistani society is also responsible for the entrenchment of radicalism because of the way it celebrates those who kill in the name of upholding Islam.

"There is a shocking culture of putting the murderers on a pedestal, garlanding them and naming a mosque or library after them, lauding their killing as holy," he says.

Christian Today said he added, "This admiration of the 'holy murderers' exacerbates religious intolerance, disunity, and damages any efforts towards peaceful coexistence among people from various faith backgrounds."

Khan added, "This glorification of 'murderers' in Pakistan is a breeding ground for fueling extremism and fundamentalism. Such a societal attitude is a trap for teenage boys who yearn to gain acclaim from others."

Khan is calling instead for a "rational discourse" to promote interfaith harmony an d for peace studies to be included in the national curriculum.

"The culture of persecution against minorities must end and the prosecution of those who misuse blasphemy laws has to be its first priority," Christian Today reported he said.

"Only then is there hope that rule of law will prevail and the Pakistan court will exist to provide justice to Asia Bibi, and those falsely accused of blasphemy."


 

 

Asia Bibi: A life hanging in the balance
Will she finally get justice

By Shahid Khan
Special to ASSIST News Service

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND (ANS) -- Imagine a life in solitary confinement, spending years in a dark dungeon, living with ceaseless agony, torture, and uncertainty.

 

 

You are isolated from your family and friends. You receive threats not only from the outside world but also from those who are supposed to safeguard you. In Pakistan, for a blasphemy accused person, fears are countless and the ones who police you can also be a threat to your life.

These are the traumas for Asia Bibi, an impoverished mother of five, in her forties, who never knew what life was going to throw at her after getting into a heated argument in June 2009, which culminated in a death sentence due to Pakistan's controversial blasphemy laws.

Last month the Pakistan courts announced another appeal date for Tuesday, May 27, 2014, after four previous appeal hearings were adjourned due to the mounting pressure from extremist and fundamentalist groups.

The efficiency of any democratic state rests in the institutions that exist to provide unbiased and impartial services to its citizens, regardless of their background. However, ironically, Pakistan courts succumb to the pressure to provide justice to those accused of blasphemy.

Most of those, who have been accused of blasphemy, continue to battle for their lives, waiting for appeals in courts for years upon years; some are either put to death while in police custody with the official cause being “bad health” or found “mysteriously dead.” Even worse, their predators sometimes march into their prison cell and kill them while the guards turn a blind eye.

Despite the international calls for a pardon for Asia Bibi, the Pakistan Government has not moved a muscle or made any suggestion to end the misery facing this poor mother whilst her life hangs in the balance. Hence the chronology of persecution for Asia Bibi continues in many shapes and forms to this day.

Protests in Pakistan on behalf of Asia Bibi

Human rights groups and advocacy organizations worldwide have been campaigning for the release of Ms. Bibi, staging protests from London to Brussels, from Geneva to New York, petitioning to end the misuse of Pakistan blasphemy laws which are being used to target the members of minorities to settle personal scores and vendettas.

During his recent visit to the UK, the Prime Minister of Pakistan, Nawaz Sharif, was urged by his British counterpart, David Cameron, to ensure protection and promotion of basic human rights in Pakistan. While the UK Government has already demanded transparency, justice, and the rule of law for minorities, the status quo remains for millions around the world who have to battle for their equal, fundamental rights every day. Will justice ever prevail for this vulnerable part of society?

The recent spike in blasphemy cases is a threat to the millions of minority community members in Pakistan. Religious intolerance and escalating extremism has crippled its citizens who, in spite of knowing its horrors, are unable to stop it. According to the most recent report by the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, 14 individuals are currently on death row over blasphemy and 19 others are serving life sentences.

Hatred spewed by Pakistani clerics against the blasphemy accused is so radicalizing that some individuals take the law into their own hands. The most recent example of this is the case of 65-year-old Khalil Ahmed, a member of the Ahmadiyya Muslim community, who was shot dead by a school boy, while in police custody, on May 16, 2014.

One cannot help but wonder how a school boy was able to get access to a prison cell, let alone a gun? Sadly the police in Pakistan is often found to be in league with those wishing to “teach a lesson” to the blasphemy accused. And in this shocking case, they must have aided and abetted the incident by not searching Mr. Ahmed’s visitor, or allowing him to carry a weapon. The boy, undoubtedly coerced by others, committed an act of self-administered justice thinking that he is doing a favor to the religious ideology to which he must have been indoctrinated, in a hope to receive praise from the rest of the fold.

There is a shocking culture of putting the murderers on a pedestal, garlanding them, and naming a mosque or library after them, and in so doing, lauding their killing as “holy.” This admiration of the “holy murderers” exacerbates religious intolerance, disunity, and damages any efforts towards peaceful coexistence among people from various faith backgrounds.

This glorification of “murderers” in Pakistan is a breeding ground for fuelling extremism and fundamentalism. Such a societal attitude is a trap for teenage boys who yearn to gain acclaim from others. The young assassin, who has not been named for security reasons, is a product of such a culture.

Pakistan’s legal system is far from any recognizable democratic values. It persecutes the weak and the vulnerable segments of the society. These people hope against the hope for justice while facing threats to their security, the uncertainty of which must be terrifying to face.

A local radical cleric has put a price of 500,000 Pakistani Rupees, (£3,700 UK Pounds, $5,800 US Dollars) on Asia Bibi’s head for anyone one who will end her life. In the midst of these security concerns, the poor mother was moved from Lahore jail to Multan Women’s Jail. In the face of all these challenges, on May 27, Asia Bibi will hopefully face the panel of judges headed by judge Anwar-Ul-Haq for the first time to appeal against her death sentence.

The constitution of Pakistan provides equal rights to its entire people. The state has a responsibility to protect its citizens including minorities, and as such has to prevent the misuse of Pakistan blasphemy laws. The need of the hour is to start a rational discourse to promote interfaith harmony and to include peace studies in the national curriculum among the students at grass roots level.

The culture of persecution against minorities must end and the prosecution of those who misuse blasphemy laws has to be its first priority. Only then will there be hope that the rule of law will prevail and the Pakistan court will exist to provide justice to Asia Bibi, and those falsely accused of blasphemy.

Therefore, I ask you to join with me to pray that that finally true justice will be done for Asia Bibi so that she can finally return to her family, and her many Christian friends.

Source: Assist News Service



Edited by News Room on 05/28/2014 at 5:43pm
Back to Top
View News Room's Profile Search for other posts by News Room

If you wish to post a reply to this topic you must first login
If you are not already registered you must first register

  Post Reply Post New Topic
Printable version Printable version

Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot create polls in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum