KARACHI: While a joint interrogation team investigating the allegations made by former Muttahida Qaumi Movement activist Saulat Mirza has completed the task and filed its report to the home department, the death row prisoner is learnt to have requested the Sindh High Court chief justice to defer his execution and order action against those who extended threats to his wife from South Africa.

Informed sources, however, said that the member inspection team of the SHC advised Mirza’s counsel to seek legal remedy under the law.

Also read: ATC asked to issue new black warrant for Saulat Mirza’s hanging

The JIT was set up by the Sindh government to investigate the allegations made by Mirza against the MQM, its founding chief Altaf Hussain and the Sindh governor through a video statement.

The statement was aired by news channels just hours before his execution last month that later won him a new lease of life for a month.

A source privy to the recent JIT development said: “The interrogation has been done during which the team conducted a couple of interviews with the convict at the Machh jail in Balochistan.”

“The report carries several facts which were already part of the file prepared during the judicial process and trial of the convict though there are a few new ones which have been incorporated in the report.”

The sources said that Mirza wrote four different letters to SHC chief justice Faisal Arab. In one of the letters, he urged the court to order police to include in the Shahid Hamid murder case the accused persons he had named in his latest statement.

The death row convict also informed the SHC that some people in South Africa were giving threats to his wife and other family members whose life was in danger, said the sources.

The sources said that the death row prisoner asked the court to order recording of his statement before a judicial magistrate so that a fresh charge-sheet in the Shahid Hamid murder case could be submitted in the trial court against the accused persons he had mentioned in his statement.

They added that Mirza in his letter stated that his wife knew the names of those who extended threats of dire consequences. He requested the court to direct the law-enforcers to immediately arrest those giving threats.

Published in Dawn, April 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Opinion

Editorial

Enrolment drive
Updated 10 May, 2024

Enrolment drive

The authorities should implement targeted interventions to bring out-of-school children, especially girls, into the educational system.
Gwadar outrage
10 May, 2024

Gwadar outrage

JUST two days after the president, while on a visit to Balochistan, discussed the need for a political dialogue to...
Save the witness
10 May, 2024

Save the witness

THE old affliction of failed enforcement has rendered another law lifeless. Enacted over a decade ago, the Sindh...
May 9 fallout
Updated 09 May, 2024

May 9 fallout

It is important that this chapter be closed satisfactorily so that the nation can move forward.
A fresh approach?
09 May, 2024

A fresh approach?

SUCCESSIVE governments have tried to address the problems of Balochistan — particularly the province’s ...
Visa fraud
09 May, 2024

Visa fraud

THE FIA has a new task at hand: cracking down on fraudulent work visas. This was prompted by the discovery of a...