BACA concerned that political moves and discrimination are undermining Pak-judicial process to detriment of Christians

Pakistani Lawyers in 2010, smashing a police car in protest to former President of Lahore Bar Association being accused of raping and murdering a Christian girl named Shazia Bashir of 11 years.

Please sign our petition (here)

British Asian Christian Association believes a large number of persecuted Christians that we are supporting are suffering the ignominy of extended lengths
of time between hearings and unfathomable postponements to their detriment. 

Our belief is that the majority of these delays stem from a fear of retribution from judgements that would go in the favour of Pak-Christians, discrimination
by judges holding to a biased Islamic view of the laws and external political manoeuvres that should have no impact on an independent judiciary.

A further recent concern is hard evidence that legal practitioners believe that their fraternity is above the law. A diabolical stance that has manifested
in lawyers strikes that have disabled the judicial process in recent weeks and left the many Christians we are supporting, with a raft of unnecessary court
deferments. Strike-induced delays affects all Pakistani citizens however and is not an example of discrimination but a woeful set of morals within the
Pak-legal fraternity -though such strikes have targeted Christians previously.

The recent lawyers strikes began due to an argument between the legal fraternity and doctors fraternity in Punjab after one lawyer argued that members
of the legal fraternity and their families deserved preferential treatment (read NYtimes artiicle click here)
This led to lawyers smashing and vandalising the The Institute of Cardiology in Lahore on 11th December 2019. After police made a number of arrests of
rioting solicitors the Punjab Bar Council declared a strike on 16th December 2019 for an indefinite period. They have been demanded immediate release of
all arrested lawyers without charge – despite three patients having died in the lawyer attacks. 

Only days later after ex-strongman President Musharraf was given a death sentence in a Special Court for suspending the country’s constitution in 2007,
lawyers in Khyber Pakthunkwa also weighed in with a strike.  Their angst stemmed from criticism of the judgement by Pakistan’s military (click here)

It should be noted that lawyer riots and strikes are not unusual and BACA reflects on the tragedy of Shazia Bashir a minor who was raped and murdered by
a former Lahore Bar Association Chairman. Incensed by any accusation against a member of the legal fraternity 300 Lawyers stormed the courts and smashed
it to bits in a disgusting act of vandalism (click here)
They also smashed Police cars and threatened the family of Shazia Bashir who later had to accept a compensation arrangement after judges altered the facts
of  her case.  In this case the rioting and strikes were directly affecting a Christian family’s right for a fair trial for the rape and murder of their daughter.

Reasons for the high frequency of postponements include:

  • Indefinite holidays taken up by judges and no process for cases to be taken up by substitutes. 
  • Opposition lawyers failing to be prepared for court cases and being given several opportunities to delay the court process without any solid reason
    .
  • One judge stating that to give a decision in favour of a Christian victim would be offensive to his Islamic principles (read paragraph on Zafar Bhatti
    later in this article)
  • In the case of Asia Bibi, Supreme  Judge Iqbal Hameed ur Rehman refused to preside over her case because he had already presided over the murder
    case of Salmaan Taseer. Using this ‘conflict of interest’ as an excuse to extricate himself on a case he was to frightened to preside over resulting
    in widespread condemnation. Strangely he had known about the case for months yet said nothing earlier and resigned from his position two weeks
    after his decision (click here).

BACA believe that often the delays are quite deliberate and provide an opportunity for the opposing parties being acquitted of murder and rape charges,
by coercing the Pak-Christian victims into accepting a bribe as compensation.  The constant failure to gain any progress in their pursuit of justice
results in Christians often succumbing to the demands of aggressors, for fear of attacks on loved ones and that they will eventually lose a rock solid
case through corruption.

BACA believe that often judges will be receiving bribes especially from wealthy and powerful families involved in the persecution of the undesirable Christian
victims.

BACA is also concerned that Christians can wait up to twenty times longer than Muslims to attain justice or an acquittal from false allegations. When Veena
Malik a Pakistani actress was given a 26 year blasphemy sentence and large fine she was able to get an appeal date in 2 weeks.  However, after a strong
legal team figured out the conviction in Gilgit would only be enacted there she was able to quit the province shared by India and Pakistan and relocate
to another part of Pakistan with no consequence (click here).
A Christian in Gilgit would no doubt have been imprisoned for years before any release on appeal. Moreover, when a Christian lawyer turned up to court for Zafar Bhatti’s blasphemy appeal he was publicly condemned by the Judge who threatened legal action if he returned to court during a Bar Association strike.

It is clear to BACA that competing factions in the judiciary, army and political sphere have laid waste to any sense of justice and equality in a nation
that is steeped in corruption and avarice.  Sadly the biggest victims are the minorities of Pakistan of which Christians are a notable social underclass
and too often victims of the legal process. For those Christians embroiled in any legal case in Pakistan justice is a rare commodity and BACA calls for
immediate reforms of the laws and judiciary to alter a disturbing trajectory towards an exclusion of minority rights.  Moreover, their must be an
immediate termination of current protections of those with higher social status who are inevitably able to circumvent the law.

Please sign our petition (here)

Below we list some of the persecuted Christians to whom we are providing legal support and/or financial support as they fight for justice in Pakistan:


Image of Elisha and her family with our BACA officer Mehwish Bhatti at Islamabad Family Court

Elisha Iqbal (forced conversion, abduction & rape case)

Elisha (13 yrs) was kidnapped from the village of Pindorian, Islamabad in November 2017. After a few days a stranger brought papers to her father,
Iqbal Masih, confirming that she has been married to a Muslim man named Qadeer Ismael and was now legally bound to him. Mr Masih took the papers to
the local police station and demanded that his daughter’s rapist and kidnapper be arrested and for Elisha to be returned to him.

Despite being eventually returned to her parents by Justice Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui in 2018 after charges of abduction and being forced into an Islamic marriage were made, Elisha is still fighting for her current freedom from the marriage in a legal battle undertaken through the family court. 


BPCA is paying for two cases, one is against the abductor for kidnapping, raping and forcing Elisha into a Muslim marriage which is running in the
family court of Honourable Judge Rifat Mehmood in Islamabad. The other case is for the cancellation of her nikah (marriage) performed under duress
and is being heard in the court of Honourable Judge Tahir Rabbani at the session court Islamabad.

Four postponements have so far delayed proceedings and the defence have not appeared in court to record their opening testimonies.  It beggars belief that the judge in this case has not set a strict deadline for the testimony recording as the continued absence of the accused only serves to subvert the law.


All the accused men in this case have been released on bail, putting the family in danger. The defence are yet to appear in court for the recording
of statements for the four consecutive hearing dates in the abduction/rape case. The nikah side to the case is already complete however and the final
verdict from the Judge for the annulment of her nikah has been postponed three times already.  This is due to an initial deferment when the
judge went on holiday followed by two further postponements when the defence solicitor requested a further submission of evidence before the verdict
is pronounced but failed to meet the two submitting deadlines. A date for a court hearing was rescheduled for 3rd January but itself had to be postponed
because of the solicitors strike that began on 16th December 2019. These unnecessary delays place Elisha and her family under severe stress and anxiety and prevent justice.

The next hearing for the rape/abduction case is on the 16th January 2020
The next hearing for the Nikah case is on 16th January 2020.

Please pray for a swift and favourable decision and for justice to prevail.




Vikram’s family with BACA officer Irfan Masih (blue shirt) at Karachi Session Court.

Vikram Alvin (grievous bodily harm and false allegations)

A 2nd year chemical engineering student and resident of KDA 2, Mehmoodabad, Karachi, was beaten so badly by a mob of young Muslim men accompanying
Islamic cleric using rods and sticks that he lost his sight in both eyes. Vikram Alvin was also stoned outside his home and now finds that vision
has returned in one eye though significantly impaired. 

The court trial started in 2019 for both cases in the Honourable court of Rajesh Chandar at session court Karachi. The main case they are fighting
is against the culprits for losing sight in one of Vikram’s eye. This case has made no progress since the beginning of trial.

Trial dates are repeatedly cancelled, due to the judges holidays in the session court of Rajesh Chandar. for both of their cases in Karachi.

All the accused have been released on bail and have been offering bribes and issuing threats in an attempt to bring and end to the legal

case against them. Vikram and his family are also fighting allegations that they were the violent party and are themselves out on bail. 
BACA has covered all the legal costs for fighting the case and for the bail fines required to release them from prison.

As both the cases are in the same court and under the same Judge the family have had to suffer the ignominy of no progress at all after the judge
failed to appear for 6 hearings.  The reason for each postponement has been stated as non-attendance of the judge who is on an
indefinite leave of absence and is on holiday somewhere abroad.

The next hearing date is on 8th of January 2020 for both cases.  
Please pray for, an end to the solicitors strike, successful attendance by the judge and for a positive outcome.



Nabeels family with BACA officer Mehwish Bhatti (centre)

Nabeel Masih (Blasphemy Case)

16 year old Nabeel Masih, a resident of Kasur in Punjab Province, was charged with a blasphemy after a ‘First Incident Report’ (FIR) was registered
at Kasur Police station. The complainant Mr Akhtar Ali alleged that he had viewed a blasphemous post on Nabeel’s Masih’s Facebook timeline. He
maintained that the picture had been posted in a “derogatory manner” which would hurt the religious sentiments of Muslims.

Without a proper investigation and as soon as the allegation was made on against Nabeel who is considered a pariah Christian, Pakistan’s police force
acted in their usual rushed manner and without hesitation arrested Nabeel with text book precision. Their is a commonly held belief among Muslims of
Pakistan that all Christians are criminals due to the caricaturing and demonising of all minorities in the national school curriculum textbooks
of Pakistan. 

Since the magistrate at Kasur Magistrates court rejected Nabeel’s innocence plea on 7th February 2017 and because of a unreliable and incompatent
legal defence, his bail application was never submitted. Now thanks to BACA’s solicitor Mr. Naseeb Masih we have submitted an appeal in the
Lahore High Court.  Our appeal registered on 28th November 2019 has called for the expeditious disposal of FIR 487/16 V/S 295/295A of the
Pakistan Penal Code. Civil Judge Mr Tariq Bashir 

The hearing of the blasphemy appeal was postponed from the 4th January 2020 after the lawyers strike began in Pakistan on 16th December 2019. A date for the next hearing has been fixed for 14th January 2019. Our appeal is based on the fact that someone sent Nabeel an offensive image to Facebook and that he did not generate it. He was the unwitting victim of someone else’s folly.

Please pray for the appeal to be upheld and for young Nabeel Masih to be released from the brutal incarceration at Lahore Prison which has already removed much of his youth already.




Maria Jalal and her niece outside Shahdra Session Court

Maria Jalal (Rape Case)

Maria Jalal  was only 15 years old when she was continually and brutally raped over a 24-hour period in June 2019. The despicable attack occurred
after she opened the door to a debt collector having been asked by her mother to pay the next instalment of the families microloan repayment. Maria
has now been moved to safety, courtesy of British Asian Christian Association after a series of threats and attempts to coerce the family into dropping
her much publicised rape case.

Any attack of this nature is horrifying but the fact that Maria Jalal was kidnapped after having first paid the regular loan repayment on behalf of
her parents is a sickening new twist. Previous cases have generally involved the unjustifiable rape of Christian women when a payment has not been
made.

Maria is facing major delays for recording her Qanoone-Shihadat (opening statement) statement in front of Additional Session Judge Mohammad
Saeed at Shahdra Session Court.

There have been 6 postponements of this case so far. The first date on 3rd December 2019 was deferred after the opponent party lawyer didn’t
show up, resulting in delay of the first recordings of an opening statement. At the next hearing on the 8th December the Judge
cancelled the proceedings after both lawyers were taking part in the lawyers strike. 14th December was given for the next scheduled date
but that has to been since been moved with a further three postponements thereafter due to the strikes. 

No date has been given for the next hearing and we ask supporters to pray for an end to the lawyers strike and for justice for Maria.  BACA is paying for the entirety of the legal costs for the family and costs of travelling to court.



Lawyer Tahir Naveed, BACA volunteer and Laiba’s grandmother at Sarghoda Session Court


Laiba
(Abduction and forced Marriage case)

A Christian girl from Sargodha was abducted and forced into a conversion to Islam and marriage to a Muslim man. Laiba Shahzad was taken by Imran
Haider (24 yrs) to an unknown location after being dropped off to school by her rickshaw driver.

In a statement the rickshaw driver said that early on Tuesday 16th July 2019 he left the 9th grade Grammar school student as usual on the street corner
near her Mission Grammar Private School. Laiba however failed to return home later that day.  A few days later Laiba called from a mystery number
and said that she had eloped and was now married to a Muslim man.  The family never believed her as she wept profusely whilst describing her marriage. 
Police identified the owner of the phone as Mr Haider who appeared in court with a weeping Laiba who confirmed she was willingly married.  It
was obvious to the courts that she had been coerced and that she was a minor for whom it was illegal to marry.

Sargodha session Court has issued arrest warrants against her abductor and Mr Imran Haider who has been missing since the court orders and for
all intents and purposes is absconding from the police.

The next hearing will be scheduled according to his arrest.  Laiba is also missing and a nationwide manhunt is in process. BACA continue to pay for legal costs and travel expenses for the family to get to court hearings.

BACA lawyers were successful in obtaining an annulment for the wedding and are praying for the swift return of Laiba and imprisonment of Haider for the abduction and false marriage.  Please pray for the discovery of Laiba and Haider’s whereabouts so full justice is obtained with this case.



Wife of Zafar Nawab Bibi receiving some of the regular support provided by BACA


Zafar Bhatti (Blasphemy victim)


Zafar Bhatti was accused of Blasphemy on 11th of July 2012 after allegedly sending blasphemous texts despite a phone that was submitted as evidence, being
registered to the national identity card of a completely different person. Ghazala Khan to whom the phone belonged was granted bail due to her
poor health and vulnerability as a woman and died later in 2013.  Sadly for Zafar was never released despite an obvious lack of evidence of him
committing any crime.  

We are providing Zafar and her wife full financial support which includes their home rent, bills, Grocery medical and other expenses related to Zafar in Jail as well.  

Zafar’s final verdict for his appeal has been delayed in the last 7 hearings due to a judges holiday for the first three hearings. 
In the 4th hearing Judge Raja Mehmood Abbasi decided that his religious conscience would not permit him to arrive at a verdict for the case. Suggesting
that his Islamic beliefs meant that he could not free Zafar despite no evidence of a crime. Such discrimination is woefully short of what is expected
of a Judge bit may also be a symptom of abject fear of reprisal should he free Zafar. The case has been passed on to Magistrate Tariq Abbas who has
postponed twice due to the lawyers strike.

The next proposed hearing for this appeal case will be on the 21st January 2020, and is based on the offensive text being on another persons phone and the fact that Zafar is illiterate and could not have written the alleged English text.



Image of Badil Masih’s mother and brother at funeral

Badil Masih (murder case)

A 10 year old Christian child who chose to work in a dangerous scrap factory so he could support his mother who had to fend for a family of
two boys and a drug-addicted husband, was raped and tortured before being killed by his Muslim employers.

Mohammad Akram and Irfan (aka Kaloo) were both arrested in Sarghoda on 14th July 2019, for the murder of Badil Shahzad, from the village
of Rasheedabad in Essa Nagri, Faisalabad.

BACA has been providing full legal support via Advocate  Zubair Janjua, monthly financial support for the mother so she can sustain her family
while the court process is ongoing and costs for travel to the court. The family are awaiting a court date to provide an opening statement
at Faisalabad District Court. In the meanwhile the same delays have meant the murderers have not been able to secure bail.

 

The opposing parties friends and family are threatening Badil Masih’s family in an attempt to have the case withdrawn by offering
a piece of land in return. The family is under a lot of pressure as both the accused have applied for bail for which a verdict
is pending. The mother of Badil, Shareefa Bibi, fear the release of the accused as he can harm the family of Badil as he is powerful
and wealthy.

The next date is not yet scheduled because of the lawyer strike.

We cannot support any of these victims without the help of our gracious supporters.  If you would like to help with our ongoing work for these and other persecuted victims, please donate by (clicking here)