Top court seeks report on death row convicts

Petitioner asks SC to decide fate of condemned prisoners

PHOTO: AFP

ISLAMABAD:


The top court directed the federal government on Tuesday to submit a report on the status of thousands of death row prisoners languishing in jails for years.


A three-judge bench of the Supreme Court, headed by Justice Ejaz Afzal Khan, took up a petition filed by Barrister Zafarullah, who requested the court to convert the sentences of death row convicts into life imprisonment.

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The petitioner also asked the SC to decide the fate of the condemned prisoners in view of the terms they have served and the various changes occurred since the Law Reforms Ordinance 1972.

Capital punishment is legal in Pakistan. There had been a moratorium on executions since 2008, but it was lifted for terrorism cases as of December 16, 2014, following the massacre of nearly 150 people, mostly pupils, at the Army Public School in Peshawar.

It has been reported that there are more than 6,000 death row prisoners in Pakistan — more than anywhere in the world. Pakistan has executed 239 death row convicts since the APS tragedy.

The bench directed Deputy Attorney General Sajid Ilyas Bhatti to file a report on the status of death row prisoners within 15 days.


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Last year the SC — while dismissing a plea of the same petitioner against abolition of the death penalty in Pakistan — had observed that the right to life and liberty is not absolute in nature; such a right is, however, circumscribed and subject to law.

Justice Mian Saqib Nisar, while authoring the judgment, observed that the petitioner had referred to Article 9 of the Constitution, which says no person shall be deprived of life or liberty. But the court clarified that the right to life and liberty is not absolute in nature and a person cannot be bereft of his life and liberty except in accordance with the law.

Referring to Article 4(2)(a), the court said a person could be deprived of his life and liberty if it is provided and prescribed by any law.

The judgment also said the petitioner had failed to show the court that on the basis of two constitutional clauses, the top court could direct the abolition of the death penalty in Pakistan and annul any law.

Regarding the petitioner’s argument that Article 9 was not properly worded, the parliament should make necessary amendment, said the judgment. “As regards the argument that the criminal justice system is unfair, unreasonable and convicts and death punishments lack due process, suffice it to say that this by itself is not a threshold or touchstone for striking down any law, rather if there is deficiency in the relevant law, it is the duty of parliament to provide it or correct the law by amendment.”

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Referring to Article 10-A, the court said that if any person is aggrieved on account of lack of fair trial or due process of law, he has the remedy of approaching the appropriate forum to challenge such a trial and conviction.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 3rd, 2016.
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