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Asia Bibi to spend Christmas in custody

By AFP
December 24, 2018

ISLAMABAD: Asia Bibi will celebrate Christmas under guard, despite being cleared of the blasphemy charges that kept her in jail since 2010.

Bibi -- a former labourer who was on death row for eight years -- remains a prime target in Pakistan, with extremists calling for her blood and the government refusing to reveal her location out of fear for her safety. "It´s too dangerous... People want to kill her," said Yousaf Hadayat, a resident from one of Islamabad´s impoverished Christian ghettos, littered this week by a smattering of Santa hats and Christmas trees.

Security this Christmas, like many before it, will be tight with the government set to deploy armed forces to the Christian colonies. Residents say they feel more uneasy than ever during the religious holiday while Bibi´s fate continues to loom large.

"We’re afraid," said Pastor Munawar Inayat at Holy of Holies Church in Islamabad. "We can´t speak against anyone." The Supreme Court overturned Bibi’s death sentence for blasphemy in October, and she has legally been a free woman ever since. But the ruling ignited days of violent demonstrations that paralysed large swathes of the country. The government has since launched a crackdown on the extremists.

Bibi, who is seeking asylum abroad, is believed to be in protective custody inside Pakistan as the review continues. But there is no clear timeline for when it will be completed. A government spokesman refused to comment on its status, saying only that the matter is with the court.

Since Bibi’s acquittal speculation has been rife that an asylum deal with a European or North American country may be in the works.

Many residents of the 100 Quarters Colony in Islamabad cautioned against Bibi’s release, saying her safety would only be guaranteed once she was granted asylum in a foreign country. "No, no. She cannot stay," said resident Hadayat.

Polio campaign worker Shahnaz Arif argued against Bibi’s ongoing custody. "We should get the same freedom that others enjoy," she said. Even so she admitted she was afraid. "There is not enough security for our leaders -- we are just poor citizens," she explained.

Christians -- who make up around two percent of the population -- occupy one of the lowest rungs in class-obsessed Pakistani society, largely living in slums and working menial jobs as street sweepers, cleaners and cooks.

The tension comes as Washington added Pakistan this month to a blacklist of countries that it says wantonly violate religious freedom. Islamabad later dismissed the US move as politically motivated.

Back in the 100 Quarters Colony, residents said their thoughts were with a mother who has already spent many Christmases in solitary confinement. "Christmas is celebrated with near and dear ones, and not in custody," said Christmas decoration seller Amjab Burgkat. "There are security fears, but she should celebrate Christmas with her family."