No to death penalty, Release Sarabjit Singh

  • al: Amandeep Singh 
  • destinatario: Honourable President of Pakistan,Honourable Chief Justice of Pakistan

Indian death row prisoner Sarabjit Singh fate still hangs in balance as there seems to be no hope for him. With every passing day, the man is surely inching closer to gallows and his execution now looks imminent.

The Pakistan Supreme Court dismissal of his review petition, challenging the death sentence given to him for his alleged involvement in bomb attacks in 1990, has closed all legal options for him and thus all hopes of his release are fast fading.

The chances are less likely that Pakistan authorities will now succumb to New Delhi  pressure and reconsider their decision to hang Sarabjit Singh.

The development is surely a setback for Pakistan Human Rights Minister Ansar Burney, who campaigned hard to highlight Sarabjit Singh case and pleaded that the Pakistan establishment view the case from a humanitarian angle.

Months of media trumpeting of the issue and the emotional appeals made by Sarabjit family especially his sister Daljeet Kaur, who visited her brother in Kot Lakhpat jail in Pakistan, bore no fruits.

The issue has been raised at several fora by Human Rights organisations and his family has lobbied hard seeking New Delhi urgent intervention in the case.

Owing to media-generated public outcry over the issue, the Indian government has in the past used official channels to put pressure on Pakistan to revert its decision to show clemency to Sarabjit Singh.

At regular intervals, New Delhi has conveyed the strong sentiments of Indians to Islamabad and hoped for some leniency from the Pakistan side over the issue.

But all effort seems to have been wasted as the political developments in the two countries have changed a lot and the bilateral ties between the two nuclear states are at their lowest level.

After the deadly terrorist strikes in Mumbai last year, the Indian government has cut off all dialogue with Islamabad and asked it to fulfil its commitment to stem terrorism first before coming to the negotiating table.

The stand taken by the Indian government is appropriate considering the proven involvement of Pakistan-based terrorists in the ghastly attacks, which claimed the lives of nearly 183 people of different nationalities.

In the backdrop of the hostile environment, which is further pushing the two sides away from holding peace parleys, New Delhi has limited options in Sarabjit Singh case.

The government can only make an appeal on humanitarian grounds since Sarabjit Singh has been convicted after a lengthy trial.

The two sides have locked horns on several issues and if the Indian government presses hard on the matter pertaining to Sarabjit, it might give Pakistan a chance to bargain a deal for releasing hardcore Pakistani prisoners languishing in Indian jails.

So the ball clearly lies in Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari court, who constitutionally, has the power to pardon or remit his sentence.

But, President Zardari has so far failed to take any decision amidst fears that granting pardon to him would aggravate problems for his government on the domestic front.

In view of the resurgence of PML-N and its top leader Nawaz Sharif and reinstatement of deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, a weakened Pakistan President will not like to harm his reputation in his country.

Zardari is fully aware that if he grants amnesty to Sarabjit Singh, then he will have to face the anger and frustration of the Pakistani Awam, amid allegations of succumbing to New Delhi pressure.

Further, if the government repeals Sarabjit death sentence, the extremists elements will take advantage of the situation, get validity and public sanction for their militant activities.

And if it goes ahead with the execution of Sarabjit Singh, the country risks annoying New Delhi, which has time and again reprimanded it for lack of co-operation to bring the perpetrators of Mumbai attack to justice.

So the best bet for President Zardari would be to delay the execution for the time being.

One more interesting thing, which needs to be mentioned here is the role played by Sarabjit lawyer Rana Abdul Hamid, whose non-pursuance of the case led to the dismissal of Sarabjit mercy petition.

Hamid, who has admitted lapse on his part and pledged to approach the authorities again to save his client life, might have shied away from attending the court proceedings under pressure from terrorist groups.

Whatever one says, the news has come as a bolt from the blue for Sarabjit family, which has been praying for his safe return. The family is braving all odds and has still not lost hope that Sarabjit will be back with them one day.

It also remains to be seen whether India is willing to go that extra mile and ask Pakistan through diplomatic channels for a rethink on the matter. No one knows whether Sarabjit is really guilty, no one is sure whether he is actually an Indian spy, but his case surely depicts the deplorable condition of hundreds of ordinary prisoners who are languishing in jails on both sides and awaiting a final verdict on their fate.

Subject:Release of Sarabjit Singh

Respected Sirs,
Sarabjit Singh, also known as Manjit Singh, is an Indian citizen held prisoner in Pakistan. He was convicted for his alleged involvement in 1990 serial bomb blasts in Lahore and Multan that killed 14 people. He  is just a poor farmer and victim of mistaken identity, who strayed into Pakistan from his village located on the border.
                                             He is a simple farmer who was arrested after he strayed across the Pakistani border from his northern frontier hometown of Bhikiwind in Punjab state while drunk in 1990. His wife Sukh Prit Kaur, a resident of Bhikhiwind village of district Tarantaran, claimed he left to plough his fields near Wagah Border on August 28, 1990, but never returned. She said the family launched a search but could not find any clue to his whereabouts for nine months and finally they received a letter from Manjit informing them that he was caught by Pakistani border forces when he mistakenly crossed the border under the influence of liquor. External Affairs Minister K. Natwar Singh took up Manjit Singh%u2019s case with Pakistan High Commissioner Aziz Ahmed Khan and urged him to convey Delhi%u2019s hope that Islamabad would treat the matter as a humanitarian issue.

                                            Shaukat Salim, a key witness in the case against Sarabjit, was caught on tape retracting his statement on April 26, 2008. Salim's father and other relatives were killed in the attack, and he says that Sarabjit was the one who planted the bomb. But, earlier, he had said that he made the statements implicating Sarabjit under pressure from the Pakistani police. Meanwhile, Sarabjit's lawyer Abdul Rana Hamid told CNN-IBN that Salim's statements have no value as they were never recorded in court.
           We are hopeful that the government of Pakistan will release Manjit Singh after reviewing his death sentence and our efforts for his release will not prove futile..

Respectfully submitted by


 






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