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Asia bibi leaves for Canada after Supreme Court acquittal

By a few people. Most in Pakistan see him as nothing more than a murderer but you know this.

It doesn't matter what I feel, it's how she feels. If she wants to leave and can do so ,I hope she makes a good life in another country. People seek asylum from many nations around the world inc thousands from USA to other nations.

I actually wasn't being provocative, I was under the impression that he was more liked than disliked, but that could me being biased as my family unfortunately support him.

I do think her leaving would be a better choice, she was treated unjustly for years in Pakistan, and her leaving would minimise the risk of violence.
 
Pakistan is not safe. If you can live abroad, why not an innocent Christian woman who is the number one enemy of Pakistanis.

I have always lived abroad and did not move for safety.

Europe and US are having a rise in white facism, there is no guarantee a new brown/black immigrant will be safe in such lands too.
 
Islamist Arrives in Canada to Kill 'Blasphemer' Bibi Who Fled Pakistan

Asia Bibi spent nine years on death row in a Pakistani prison after being falsely accused of blasphemy – a grave crime in the South Asian country. In 2018, she was finally acquitted and released to the great displeasure of many in a conservative region of the Islamic country.

An unidentified Islamist has published a video in which he claims to have followed Asia Bibi, a Christian who barely escaped hanging in her homeland of Pakistan over blasphemy accusations, to Canada with the intent to murder her. The anonymous individual insists in the video that "blasphemer" Asia Bibi would receive an award in Canada and would repeat her sacrilegious statements on Islam.

"To stop this act and to give Asia a terrible death and to send her to hell I have also reached Canada last night", he said.

The man didn't show his face in the video and didn't specify whether he was acting on behalf of a particular group. Canadian authorities haven't commented on the threats against Asia Bibi, who lives at an undisclosed location since leaving Pakistan for fear of her life.

Asia Bibi, a Christian, was arrested in her homeland after a row with a colleague in 2009, which resulted in the latter accusing her of blasphemy against the Prophet Muhammad. The argument began after Bibi drank from a well that was supposed to be for Muslims only.

In 2010, a court sentenced Asia Bibi to death over blasphemy accusations — a grave crime in Pakistan. The girl denied being guilty and struggled to appeal the decision. Eight years later, the court ruled that there was not enough evidence to prove her guilt and released her from prison.

The decision, however, was not well received by local Islamists, clergy, and conservative Pakistanis, who called for her execution. Muslim cleric Maulana Yousaf Qureshie even set up a bounty on Asia Bibi, promising to pay 500,000 Pakistani rupees ($3,500) to anyone who kills her.

The news of an Islamist possibly following Bibi to Canada appeared over a year after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced an open door policy on immigration, welcoming everyone who was forced out of their homelands for various reasons into the country. The decision spurred security concerns in the North American nation.

https://sputniknews.com/us/201905151075033457-islamist-kill-asia-bibi-canada/

 
Have to feel bad for Pakistani minorities including Shias and Ahmadis. Criticizing India for its persecution of minorities is fine, but we also need to look at ourselves. In many ways, Pakistan is still a worse place for minorities compared to India at the moment.
 
That video doesn’t sound like its in Canada With the bike sound behind.
 
Should have been never forced to leave Pakistan.

Pakistan has a long way to go to protect and defend its minorities against extremists.
 
Asia Bibi, the Pakistani Christian woman who spent years on death row after being convicted of blasphemy, says she always believed she would be freed.

Now living in Canada, she told the BBC that she hoped she would be able to return to Pakistan one day.

Ms Bibi has released a memoir, Enfin Libre! (Finally Free), written with French journalist Anne-Isabelle Tollet.

In it, she recounts her time in jail and her brutal treatment by guards.

In one of the most disturbing incidents she recounts how she had her neck put in a brace that was tightened with a key, and was pulled about on a chain by guards.

Pakistani authorities have dismissed the allegations, saying her claims of torture were "not plausible".

Who is Asia Bibi?
Asia Noreen - commonly known as Asia Bibi - was accused of blasphemy after an argument with a group of women in June 2009
A year later she became the first woman to be sentenced to death under Pakistan's blasphemy laws, causing an international outcry
The death sentence was quashed by the Supreme Court in 2018, triggering violent protests by religious hardliners
Ms Bibi spoke to the BBC during a visit to France where she is promoting her new book.

She recalled how, in 2009, a longstanding dispute with neighbours culminated in a group of local women accusing her of insulting the Prophet Muhammad.

"My husband was at work, my kids were in school, I had gone to pick fruit in the orchard," she said. "A mob came and dragged me away. They made fun of me, I was very helpless."

In her book, Ms Bibi tells how she feared for her life in prison, with other inmates calling for her to be hanged. She also recalled mistreatment at the hands of the prison guards.

"I can't breathe," she writes. "My neck is compressed by a neck brace that the guard can tighten as much as he wants with a big key. A long chain drags on the dirty floor; it links my throat to the guard's handcuffs that drags me like a dog."

Ms Bibi told the BBC that her Christian faith helped her through the ordeal.

"They said change your faith, and you'll be freed. But I said no. I will live my sentence. With my faith," she said.

"I found out from my husband that the whole world was praying for me. And that even the Pope had prayed for me. That made me happy. And I found out the whole world was praying for my misery to end.

"That made me feel that their prayers would definitely free me."

Ms Bibi called on Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan to free anyone unjustly accused or convicted of blasphemy and to ensure that the charges are investigated properly.

"Innocents should not be punished for no reason and people who are innocent, in prison, should be freed," she said.

"During the investigation, both parties should be questioned properly because there are a lot of problems in our investigative procedures. And it is hard to tell who is on whose side."

Despite her ordeal, Ms Bibi said she still felt positively about Pakistan and hoped to return there one day.

"It was my country that freed me. That makes me proud," she said.

"I left of my own volition because I was in danger there. Anything could have happened to me at any point. So that's why I left my country. But I have the same love for my country in my heart now. I still respect my country and I want to see the day when I'm able to go back."

She also recalled her sorrow at hearing while in jail that two politicians who tried to help her - Shahbaz Bhatti and Salman Taseer - had been murdered.

"I cried a lot. I cried for more than a week for them. Even today, my heart is full of sadness for them and I miss them," she said.

But, she says she feels no bitterness to those who called for her to be killed.

"I'm not angry at all, I've forgiven everyone from my heart and there is no hardness in me, there is patience in me because I learned how to be patient after having to leave my children behind," she said.

Who are Pakistan's Christians?
Make up 1.6% of Pakistan's predominantly Muslim population
Majority are descendents of those who converted from Hinduism under the British Raj
Most converted to escape their low-caste status and many are among the poorest in Pakistan
Targeting of Christians fuelled by strong anti-blasphemy laws and anger over US-led war in Afghanistan
What are Pakistan's blasphemy laws?

The vast majority of those convicted of blasphemy in Pakistan are Muslims or members of the Ahmadi community who identify themselves as Muslims but are regarded as heretical by orthodox Islam.

Since the 1990s scores of Christians have also been convicted. They make up just 1.6% of the population.

The Christian community has been targeted in numerous attacks in recent years, leaving many feeling vulnerable to a climate of intolerance.

Data provided by the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) shows a total of 720 Muslims, 516 Ahmedis, 238 Christians and 31 Hindus have been accused under various clauses of the blasphemy law from 1987 until 2017.

Pakistani authorities say blasphemy laws exist in many parts of the world and that all such cases in Pakistan are brought before the courts and follow due process.

Ms Bibi says in her book that the Christian community is despised and bullied and discriminated against.

But Pakistan says it attaches high importance to the protection of rights of minorities, which are guaranteed under its constitution.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-51658141
 
Actions of those Guards are very un-islamic and they will be answerable for it at the day of judgement.

By and large, no one wants to leave their motherland out of hate - sometimes harsh circumstances and cruel people make them to live uncomfortably and they are forced to live their country in order to live a healthy life.

How does an average Pakistani know about the quality of life and human rights when he did not experience them in the first place. For example, in the western world, a dog is treated in a humanely way. Therefore, they behave humanely towards humans as well. Here in Germany dogs travel on buses and trains and nobody feels scared.

In Pakistan, people do not treat each other with respect and beak Islamic teachings at every single second and minute yet they have the audacity to lecture about human rights in other countries. First fix your own house and then worry about world issues.
 
Poor woman! With every passing day, Pakistan is sinking deeper and deeper into the abyss of extremism. No Pakistani leader is brave enough to take on the rabid mullahs.
 
After all she has been through she still loves Pakistan and wishes to return, not sure I would feel the same. Hope she finds peace & solace.
 
Aasia Bibi meets French President Emmanuel Macron - says that she has been invited to live in France
 
Pakistani woman acquitted of blasphemy offered asylum in France

Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman acquitted of blasphemy in Pakistan, has said she had been invited to live in France, after a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron.

Bibi had been sentenced to death before her acquittal by the Supreme Court last year in a case that has become emblematic of fair trial concerns in such cases. She left Pakistan for Canada in May 2019 and has been living there with her family ever since.

"I have received the invitation from the president and the French Republic, and I'm honoured," Bibi told reporters on Friday, shortly after meeting Macron.

Speaking outside the Elysee Palace in Paris, Bibi said she needed time to make a decision about whether to move to France, adding she wanted to focus for now on her health and family.

An Elysee official told Reuters news agency that "France is ready to welcome her if that is her wish, in accordance with the procedures for a request for asylum".

Under French rules, someone seeking asylum has to submit a request to an independent state agency, which decides whether to grant it. It was not clear if Bibi had submitted a request.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...my-offered-asylum-france-200229074532525.html
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="ur" dir="rtl">بی بی سی کے ساتھ خصوصی انٹرویو میں توہینِ مذہب کے جھوٹے الزام میں آٹھ برس تک قید رہنے کے بعد بری ہونے والی پاکستانی مسیحی خاتون آسیہ بی بی کا کہنا ہے کہ دورانِ قید انھیں کہا گیا کہ اگر وہ مذہب بدل لیں تو رہا ہو جائیں گی۔<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/AsiaBibi?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#AsiaBibi</a> <a href="https://t.co/NMQKLIWsZh">pic.twitter.com/NMQKLIWsZh</a></p>— BBC News اردو (@BBCUrdu) <a href="https://twitter.com/BBCUrdu/status/1233599857832669184?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">February 29, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
What people don’t understand is that the only reason she was being persecuted was because she allegedly insulted Islam NOT because we was a Christian.
The state doesn’t punish anyone for being a Christian.

How hard is that to understand?
Honestly

I’m seeing headlines saying she was persecuted for being a Christian. No she wasn’t.
 
What people don’t understand is that the only reason she was being persecuted was because she allegedly insulted Islam NOT because we was a Christian.
The state doesn’t punish anyone for being a Christian.

How hard is that to understand?
Honestly

I’m seeing headlines saying she was persecuted for being a Christian. No she wasn’t.

Persecution of Christian is common in Pakistan. Hundreds of Christians have been killed in gun and bomb attacks.

Dozens of Christians have been lynched by mobs for alleged blasphemy including a Christian couple was burned alive after a mob threw them into a furnace in a brink factory.

To say the oppression of minorities is not state-sponsored would be inaccurate. Ahmedis are persecuted by the state. Adverts for sweepers at government hospitals listed ‘be a Christian’ as one of the hiring criteria. There is low-level state-sponsored persecution of minorities.
 
Persecution of Christian is common in Pakistan. Hundreds of Christians have been killed in gun and bomb attacks.

Dozens of Christians have been lynched by mobs for alleged blasphemy including a Christian couple was burned alive after a mob threw them into a furnace in a brink factory.

To say the oppression of minorities is not state-sponsored would be inaccurate. Ahmedis are persecuted by the state. Adverts for sweepers at government hospitals listed ‘be a Christian’ as one of the hiring criteria. There is low-level state-sponsored persecution of minorities.

The state doesn’t persecute christians.
They have persecuted Ahmadis but not Christians.
 
The state doesn’t persecute christians.
They have persecuted Ahmadis but not Christians.

The state persecution of Christian is less intense than that of Ahmedis. Not to forget that Christians in Pakistan are stigmatised and they are seen as impure.
 
What people don’t understand is that the only reason she was being persecuted was because she allegedly insulted Islam NOT because we was a Christian.
The state doesn’t punish anyone for being a Christian.

How hard is that to understand?
Honestly

I’m seeing headlines saying she was persecuted for being a Christian. No she wasn’t.

It’s easier to persecute Christians and other minorities through this archaic and barbaric law
 
What people don’t understand is that the only reason she was being persecuted was because she allegedly insulted Islam NOT because we was a Christian.
The state doesn’t punish anyone for being a Christian.

How hard is that to understand?
Honestly

I’m seeing headlines saying she was persecuted for being a Christian. No she wasn’t.

The allegation was made against her because she was a Christian and Pakistani villagers and simpletons are actually very bigot and intolerant.
 
I personally support blasphemy law but it needs to be implemented properly. You don't want an innocent to get accused wrongly.

People shouldn't accuse someone of blasphemy unless there is concrete and verifiable proof.
 
The allegation was made against her because she was a Christian and Pakistani villagers and simpletons are actually very bigot and intolerant.

you're going in circles.

The persecution of christians is NOT state-sponsored.
the state has never tried to persecute Christians. they have tried to persecute ahmadis but not christians.

how hard is that to understand?
 
I personally support blasphemy law but it needs to be implemented properly. You don't want an innocent to get accused wrongly.

People shouldn't accuse someone of blasphemy unless there is concrete and verifiable proof.

You should be locked up for a very long time for supporting the blasphemy law.
 
you're going in circles.

The persecution of christians is NOT state-sponsored.
the state has never tried to persecute Christians. they have tried to persecute ahmadis but not christians.

how hard is that to understand?

The state has a law that allows for the persecution of minorities and any dissident with ease. That's just as bad, hiding behind technicalities won't change that.
 
Pakistani lawyer who represented Asia Bibi says he faces threats to his life

A Pakistani lawyer who has successfully overturned a number of convictions for "blasphemy" has said he believes his life is in danger from extremists.

Saif ul Malook most recently oversaw the acquittal of a Christian couple who had been sentenced to death.

Mr Malook shared social media posts with the BBC which called for him to be "executed" for securing the acquittal.

Blasphemy is a deeply emotive topic in Muslim-majority Pakistan and is legally punishable by death.

While no one has ever been executed for the offence, dozens of people accused of blaspheming have been killed by vigilantes.

Human rights groups say the country's blasphemy laws often unfairly target religious minorities and can be used in personal feuds.

Earlier this month, the high court in Lahore quashed the convictions of Christian couple Shagufta Kausar and her husband Shafqat Emmanuel, citing a lack of evidence.

The pair were sentenced to death in 2014 for allegedly sending blasphemous text messages insulting the Prophet Muhammad. They insisted they were innocent. Ms Kausar's brother told the BBC last year he doubted the couple were literate enough even to have written the messages.

The couple's lawyer, Mr Malook, previously also represented Asia Bibi, a Christian villager who spent eight years on death row in a case that attracted international condemnation.

Ms Bibi was eventually acquitted by Pakistan's supreme court in 2018 and subsequently flown out of the country. The legal ruling led to large and violent protests by thousands of followers of a hardline cleric.

But Mr Malook told the BBC that he considered the current threats against him the "most dangerous" he had ever received. He criticised the government for not providing him with adequate security. "Not even a clerk from the Pakistani government has contacted me," he said.

Pakistani officials did not reply to a request for comment.

It is not clear how serious the specific threats are to Mr Malook, but in 2014 a lawyer representing another blasphemy defendant was shot dead. Rashid Rehman was sitting in his office when he was shot and two of his assistants were injured.

Blasphemy convictions in Pakistan by lower courts are often overturned on appeal. Human rights activists say more junior judges are intimidated into convicting suspects despite flaws in their cases.

Hearings at Lahore High Court in the case of Ms Kausar, a caretaker at a Christian school, and her paralysed husband Mr Emmanuel, had been repeatedly delayed.

Mr Malook suggested the judges were concerned at the possibility of being targeted themselves if they acquitted the pair. In April, however, the European Parliament passed a resolution urging Pakistan to reform its blasphemy laws, citing concerns over the Kausar-Emmanuel case in particular.

Mr Malook told the BBC that had case had not been highlighted internationally, he feared the appeal would've been delayed indefinitely.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-57516630
 
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