Govt hangs 100th convict

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2015-04-29T01:59:56+05:00 Our staff reporter/AFP

VEHARI/ISLAMABAD - The authorities on Tuesday carried out its 100th execution since lifting a moratorium on the death penalty last December, in what rights group Amnesty International described as a "shameful milestone".
Hangings resumed after the country's bloodiest-ever militant attack, in which the Taliban gunned down 154 people - mostly children - at Army Public School in Peshawar.
A convicted murderer was hanged to death in district jail here early Tuesday morning. District Jail Superintendent Syed Babar Shah told to The Nation that the convict of double murder Munir Ahmed, son of Allahdad was sent to gallows in the jail at 5:30am.
Munir Hussain, a resident of Sultanpur situated in the Deena Police precincts, Jhelum district, had murdered two persons - his nephew and niece Wajid Hussain and Naheed Akhter over a property dispute in 2000. The Deena Police registered case no 387/2000 under Section 302/324 of the incident.
Appeals of the convict were rejected by the Lahore High Court Rawalpindi bench on March 20, 2007, Supreme Court of Pakistan on September 1, 2007 and the President of Pakistan on July 11, 2012, upholding the verdict of District and Sessions Court Jhelum.
Mr Babar Shah informed that another convict Abdul Ghafoor, son of Ghulam Hussain, a resident of Basti Mohabbatpura Mailsi would hanged in the district jail on Wednesday (today). He had murdered an eight-year-old girl after rape, 23 years ago on June 20, 1991.
Munir Hussain, who was convicted of a double murder in 2000, was hanged in Vehari, said Syed Babar Ali Shah, superintendent of Vehari jail.
"He was convicted for murdering his nephew and niece with an axe over a property dispute in November 2000," said Shah, adding that Hussain was sentenced to death in 2001. A second prison official confirmed the execution.
Amnesty said Islamabad was gaining a reputation as one of the world's leading executioners.
A moratorium on the death penalty had been in force since 2008, but after the school attack it was lifted for those convicted of terrorism offences. In March it was extended to cover all capital offences. The European Union, the United Nations and human rights campaigners have all urged Pakistan to reinstate the moratorium.
Critics say the country's criminal justice system is marred by police torture, poor legal representation for victims and unfair trials.
Amnesty estimates that Pakistan has more than 8,000 prisoners on death row, most of whom have exhausted the appeals process.
"In reaching this shameful milestone of 100 executions in just over four months, the Pakistani authorities are showing total disregard for human life," said David Griffiths, the group's deputy Asia Pacific director, in a statement.
"Our concerns are heightened by manifestly unfair trials in many cases that fall well below minimum standards set by international law. This conveyor belt of killing will do nothing to address the root causes of crime and terrorism, and must end immediately."
Campaigners have particularly highlighted the case of Shafqat Hussain, whose lawyers say he was a juvenile at the time of his murder trial. They say evidence obtained as a result of torture was used against him. Hussain is due to be hanged on May 6 after the government ordered an investigation to try to determine his true age. The probe, carried out by the Federal Investigation Agency, found Hussain was an adult at the time of his conviction, according to media reports, though its results have not been published officially.

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