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A protest in Geneva calling for the abolition of Pakistan’s draconian blasphemy laws (Vivek Ravikumar / Wikimedia Commons)

A Catholic man in Pakistan who was suffering from advanced dementia has died in prison, after being held in custody for almost a year awaiting trial over a disputed accusation of blasphemy. Source: The Tablet.

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Pakistan said the Catholic community in Lahore was mourning the loss of a man “whose life was tragically cut short by a flawed legal process”.

Amir Peter, 61, whose brother, Fr Henry Paul OFM Cap is parish priest of St Francis Church in Lahore, was arrested after a Muslim shopkeeper accused him of violating Pakistan’s draconian blasphemy laws which carry a mandatory death sentence.

According to Katherine Sapna, executive director of the advocacy group Christians’ True Spirit, the accusation followed Peter’s claim that the businessman had overcharged him.

Ms Sapna explained that Peter was due before a court just days after his death to apply for bail on medical grounds, based on his psychological condition and severe physical deterioration in prison.

“He had been suffering from advanced dementia, and his health continued to decline throughout his detention,” she said.

A spokesman for the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Pakistan, Fr Qaiser Feroz OFM Cap, told the Fides news agency that the Catholic community in Lahore was mourning the loss of a man “whose life was tragically cut short by a flawed legal process”.

As his health deteriorated, Peter was transferred from Lahore’s District Camp Jail to the Punjab Institute of Mental Health where a medical board declared him mentally unfit to stand trial.

Fr Feroz called on the government to “take appropriate measures to protect the lives of all those who are falsely accused and imprisoned without proper investigation or evidence”.

Pakistan’s blasphemy laws have been criticised by human rights organisations and by legal experts who have warned that they are routinely misused to settle personal disputes, seize property and target religious minorities.

FULL STORY

Pakistani Catholic dies in prison awaiting trial on blasphemy charges (By Sarah McDonald, The Tablet)