ISLAMABAD: Pakistani authorities are set to hang a man who
says he was 15 when he was arrested for a murder he claims he did not commit,
lawyers said on Saturday, in the latest case to shine a spotlight on Pakistan’s
crumbling criminal justice system.
Iqbal says police framed him because he was poor by planting
two guns at his house.
Pakistani law forbids the execution of juveniles, but the
country’s courts have refused to examine Iqbal’s school records and birth
certificate because they say they were submitted too late, said Maya Foa of
British legal aid group Reprieve.
His old school record and a new birth certificate issued
this year give his age as 14 and 15 respectively. Record keeping in Pakistan is
poor and records are easily forged.
Instead, the court concluded he was in his early 20s based
on a policeman’s estimate at the time of his arrest, Foa said.
Iqbal’s friend was tried as a juvenile.
“The onus has to be on the government and prosecution to
prove that the individual facing the gallows is not a juvenile if all the
available evidence points otherwise,” she said.
“Otherwise it puts the defendant in an impossible position.”
Iqbal’s lawyer, Munir Basit, confirmed his client had been tried as an adult
and had been notified he was to hang at Sargodha jail next week.
“He has received his black warrant in the concerned jail,”
Basit said.
Court and prosecution officials were not available for
comment.
Pakistan brought back hanging in December as a way to crack
down on militancy after Taliban gunmen massacred more than 130 pupils at an
army-run school.
But very few of the 240 people hanged have any links to
militancy. Most, like Iqbal, were convicted of murder. Many of their families
say they were falsely accused and too poor to get good lawyers. Few, if any,
wealthy convicts have been hanged.
Pakistan’s criminal justice system is widely considered
corrupt. Police frequently ask for bribes and few are trained in preserving a
crime scene or collecting evidence. Instead, they rely on easily manipulated
oral statements. Accusations of torture are common.
Unskilled, poorly paid court-appointed lawyers often fail to
examine witnesses or do not turn up for hearings, and tales of judges who ask
for bribes are common.
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