The execution of Abdul Basit, a convict who was convicted of murder in 2009, has already been postponed several times after rights groups raised concerns about how a wheelchair-bound man would mount the scaffold.
How to hang a paralysed prisoner?
Amnesty said in a statement Tuesday it has been scheduled again for Wednesday.
The rights group said it has recorded 299 executions since the death penalty was controversially reinstated following the Taliban mass killing at Peshawar's Army Public School last year; the country's deadliest ever extremist attack.
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.
"Pakistan's ongoing zeal for executions is an affront to human rights and the global trend against the death penalty," David Griffiths, the group's South Asia research director, said in the statement.
‘Paralysed convict’s hanging is a cruel, peculiar punishment’
"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."
There was no evidence the "relentless" executions have done anything to counter extremism in the country, he added.
The rights group also alleged that many of the executions come after court proceedings that "do not meet international fair trial standards".
Pakistan ended a six-year moratorium on the death penalty last year as part of a crackdown after Taliban militants gunned down more than 150 people, most of them children, at the army-run school in Peshawar.
Hanging of paralysed convict stayed in Lahore
The attack shocked and outraged a country already scarred by nearly a decade of extremism.
Hangings were initially reinstated only for those convicted of terrorism, but in March they were extended to all capital offences.
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