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Family of Murdered Christian Receives Payment in Exchange for Justice in Pakistan

May 2, 2018 | Asia
May 2, 2018
AsiaPakistan

ICC Note: In October 2017, Arsalan Masih, age 16, was killed by a group of police officers after getting into a dispute with a Muslim classmate. Recently, Arsalan’s family was compensated three million rupees ($26,000 US) by those that killed Arsalan in exchange for dropping the charges against them. While this does not constitute true justice for Arsalan, it does represent a rare victory for a Christian family seeking any form of justice in Pakistan.

05/02/2018 Pakistan (World Watch Monitor) – The family of a Christian boy who was killed while in police custody has been compensated for more than the standard amount paid out in similar cases. A lawyer working for the family called the outcome a “rare victory”.

Arsalan Masih, a 16-year-old student from Sheikhupura in the north-eastern Punjab province, died after a brutal assault by policemen on 9 October last year.

His six alleged assailants – Muhammad Imtiaz, Muhammad Rashid, Muhammad Arshad, Muhammad Tanveer, Robin Masih and Muhammad Iqbal – offered the family three million rupees (US $26,000) under the Islamic concept of diyat (blood money), as restitution in exchange for court pardons; they had each spent more than four months in prison.

Section 319 of Pakistan’s Penal Code says: “Whoever commits qatl-i-khata [homicide by mistake] shall be liable to diyat.”

Khurram Shahzad Maan, Executive Director of the Organization for Legal Aid, an affiliate of the European Centre for Law and Justice, told World Watch Monitor that the government of Pakistan revises the amount fixed for diyat every year. “This year it is fixed at 1,935,594 rupees (c.US $17,000), while the family was offered three million Pakistani rupees, which they have accepted,” he said.

On 14 March the Sessions Court Judge, Aarif Mahmood Khan, accepted this exchange as legal under Pakistani law and acquitted all six men of the homicide charge.

Shaheryar Gill, a lawyer at the American Center for Law and Justice who helped with the case, told World Watch Monitor that, according to his knowledge: “There is no case where police brutality led to a Christian’s death and the [perpetrators] were then punished. Even further, there have been many instances of brutality by the police against Christians but each time they got away with the crime with impunity. However, this has come as a rare victory for our lawyers, who ensured that justice would be provided to the family.”

Arsalan’s father, Mushtaq Masih, told World Watch Monitor that the family had had no hope for justice as they were poor and illiterate and had no idea how to proceed with the case. He said the family was satisfied with the outcome.

[Full Story]

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