PAKISTAN's Supreme Court will decide on
January 29 whether to allow an appeal against its acquittal of a
Christian woman at the centre of a blasphemy row, a lawyer involved in
the case said on Thursday.
If the court refuses to allow the appeal, it
will remove the last legal hurdle facing Asia Bibi, who is a prime
target in Pakistan and remains in protective custody.
Bibi was on death row for eight years for blasphemy, a hugely sensitive charge.
The Supreme Court's decision in October last
year to overturn her conviction ignited days of violent demonstrations,
with enraged militants calling for her beheading, mutiny within the
powerful military and the assassination of the country's top judges.
The government has since launched a crackdown
on the Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP) party - the militant group
driving the violent protests - charging its leaders with sedition and
terrorism.
But authorities also struck a deal with the
protesters to end the violence, forming an agreement which included
allowing a final review of the Supreme Court's judgement.
On January 29, "the court will determine if
our appeal against her acquittal is admitted", Ghulam Mustafa Chaudhry,
the lawyer who filed the petition seeking an appeal, told AFP.
"Usually the court decides on the same day if the appeal is admitted or not," he added.
Under Pakistan's legal system any private
citizen can petition the courts on any matter of public interest or
human rights, as in the Bibi case.
However legal experts said it would be highly
unusual for the Supreme Court to overturn its own decision, especially
one that as carefully drafted as the Bibi ruling.
"It is very rare," lawyer Saad Rasool told AFP.
The three-member bench that will hear the
petition will be headed by new Chief Justice Asif Saeed Khosa,
considered the country's top expert in criminal law and who helped draft
the decision to acquit Bibi.
Approximately 40 people are believed to be on
death row or serving a life sentence for blasphemy, according to a 2018
report by the United States Commission on International Religious
Freedom.
Speculation has been rife since Bibi's
acquittal that an asylum deal with a European or North American country
may be in the works.
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