DAWN.COM

Today's Paper | May 08, 2024

Published 04 Nov, 2017 04:55pm

Lahore court suspends execution order of 'mentally challenged' murder convict

A district and sessions judge in Lahore halted the execution of a convict on Saturday on a petition contending that the prisoner was "mentally disabled and [a] declared psychiatric case".

Judge Abid Hussain Qureshi, who had taken up the petition filed by advocate Sarah Bilal of the Justice Project Pakistan (JPP), observed that the matter needs serious consideration and admitted the petition for hearing.

Saleem Ahmed was found guilty of murdering his sister Nasreen in 2001. The court had subsequently awarded him the death sentence in 2004 and issued black warrants for his hanging on November 7, 2017.

Read: Plight of mentally ill convicts

Advocate Bilal in her petition maintained that Ahmed was mentally challenged and therefore, could not be executed under the Pakistan Prison Rules.

Suspending the implementation of the death warrants, the court issued a notice to the Lahore Central Jail superintendent and called for a report, including Ahmed's latest medical record, on November 8.

In May this year, Justice Umar Ata Bandial had observed that it would be unfair to punish the mentally ill. "It will be unfair to punish someone for an act they do not know they have done," the Supreme Court judge had said.

Read Comments

Supreme Court suspends PHC verdict denying Sunni Ittehad Council reserved seats Next Story