| Mirza
Tahir Hussain and Jamshed Khan were young when fate brought
them together at the Chaklala international airport in Rawalpindi
on December 19, 1988. The former was returning home from the
United Kingdom and had rented the latter’s cab to drive
him to his village in Chakwal district. Tragedy cut short their
journey with Mirza Tahir ending up in police custody for murdering
Jamshed.
Mirza
Tahir, an ethnic Punjabi settled in Leeds in West Yorkshire,
UK, was 18 at the time of the incident. He was to spend the
next 18 years in different Pakistani prisons. Lower and superior
courts convicted him for murder, and thrice, dates were set
for his execution this year. His life was saved as a result
of a high-profile campaign during which the Prince of Wales,
Prince Charles, Prime Minister Tony Blair, British and European
Parliament MPs, human rights groups and the international media
made pleas for clemency to the Pakistan government.
Mirza
Tahir, now 36 with a graying beard, is back in the UK. His family
has been celebrating his release and the mainstream media is
full of stories praising President General Pervez Musharraf
for commuting his death sentence to life imprisonment. It enabled
him to walk out from prison a free man because he had already
spent the required time in jail. Those against capital punishment
in Pakistan and abroad hailed the President’s decision
to pardon him. Mirza Tahir’s brother Amjad Hussain, who
lives in the UK, was quoted as saying that by releasing Mirza
Tahir, the President had proved himself to be a truly enlightened
leader.
The family of Jamshed went almost unheard. They got few
opportunities to tell their side of the story. Most newspapers
didn’t even bother to seek their reaction to Mirza Tahir’s
release.
Jamshed, a Pashtun tribesman from the Mohmand Agency
and settled in Rawalpindi, was 22 when he died. His younger
brother Gul Rabi, now 30, said Jamshed was a handsome young
man at the time. “Jamshed was to get married a month later.
Preparations for his wedding were in full swing and my mother
was the happiest person around. Now she is the saddest in the
family,” he remarked.
After spending a busy time receiving relations and friends
who had come to console the family following Mirza Tahir’s
release, Jamshed’s parents, uncles and cousins have now
gone into a quiet period of mourning. His old father, Abdul
Ghani and mother were stated to still be in shock. His 62-year-old
uncle Haji Sohbat Khan, who spearheaded the legal battle to
have Mirza Tahir convicted, said there was no use mounting another
challenge in the courts after having seen how a presidential
pardon overruled a judgement made by the Supreme Court of Pakistan,
the apex court in the country. He said nobody in Pakistan had
the power to bring Mirza Tahir back to face trial. “Now
we are looking to Allah’s court for justice. That is the
supreme authority, and I am sure on the Day of Judgement we
will be holding those who wronged us by the neck,” he
contended.
Jamshed’s family belongs to the Mohmand tribal
agency in the NWFP. They have relatives in their ancestral village
of Ghalam Shah, inhabited by Musakhel Mohmands, near Mohammad
Ghat in Mohmand Agency, which borders Afghanistan, and in Peshawar.
Jamshed’s grandfather Rahmatullah moved to Rawalpindi
before Pakistan’s independence and set up his business
selling firewood. Some members later branched off into other
small businesses, selling vegetables and driving cabs. The family
lives in Chungi No.2 and has a house in R A Bazaar as well.
Jamshed had five brothers and two sisters.
Sohbat Khan’s version of events that led to Jamshed’s
murder is completely different from that of Mirza Tahir’s.
He pointed out that Mirza Tahir gave three contradictory statements
in court to justify acting in self-defence and show that Jamshed
was killed inadvertently. “On one occasion, he alleged
that Jamshed tried to sexually assault him. Another time he
claimed Jamshed tried to snatch his money, and the gun went
off during the ensuing struggle. He also gave a statement that
a second Pakhtun man accompanying Jamshed attempted to take
away his money and kill him,” argued Sohbat Khan. He also
refuted Mirza Tahir’s claim that he drove to a police
station after the incident and volunteered to surrender. “Mirza
Tahir has made up this story. It isn’t true. It was gas
station salesman Amjad Masood and restaurant owner Mir Dad,
both running businesses on G T Road, who saw blood on the back
seat of the car Mirza Tahir was driving and informed the police.
I don’t have words to thank them because they belonged
to Punjab and still gave statements in the case in support of
the Pakhtun taxi-driver unknown to them to help establish the
crime,” he explained.
The crime took place on the Grand Trunk Road at Sowan
Camp, about 12 kilometres from Islamabad. According to Sohbat
Khan, the station house officer of Sihala police station was
sitting in Mir Dad’s restaurant eating dinner when Mirza
Tahir drove the cab to the nearby petrol pump station to get
fuel. He said Mirza Tahir, his clothes stained with blood, was
caught red-handed along with the 32-bore pistol, dagger and
rope used in the murder, and Jamshed’s body was recovered
from roadside bushes. “We came to know about the murder
the next morning when Jamshed’s cousin Rahmat Khan was
sent to find him. We didn’t even lodge the First Information
Report (FIR). The police registered the FIR the way it wanted,
and it formed the basis for getting Mirza Tahir convicted in
all the courts,” he recalled.
Sohbat Khan, a wiry man who did his matriculation from
Rawalpindi and speaks fluent Urdu, refuted the claim that Mirza
Tahir was coming to Pakistan for the first time after having
left for the UK at the age of four. He narrated: “He had
come to Pakistan six months earlier as well. Such statements
are made to make him look innocent. As far as I know, Mirza
Tahir was a habitual criminal. Another taxi driver, operating
out of Chaklala airport, came forward with the claim after Mirza
Tahir was arrested that he, too, had been robbed by the same
man some time earlier. This cab driver recognised Mirza Tahir
from his picture that appeared in newspapers after his arrest
for murdering Jamshed.”
Explaining the sequence of court judgements in the case,
Sohbat Khan said an additional sessions judge sentenced Mirza
Tahir to death on September 30, 1989, and the sessions court
upheld the verdict. He said the Lahore High Court sent the case
to the Federal Shariat Court because an Islamic clause had been
inserted into the FIR. “The High Court never acquitted
Mirza Tahir, though this claim is often made in the media. The
Lahore High Court didn’t give any judgement in the case,”
he maintained. He said the Shariat Court gave Mirza Tahir the
death sentence on September 20, 1998, and the Supreme Court
upheld the decision on November 1, 2003. According to Sohbat
Khan, the Supreme Appellate Board comprising five members and
headed by Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar upheld the verdict on October
9, 2004. “President Musharraf rejected Mirza Tahir’s
mercy petition on March 18, 2006. His death warrant was issued
first on May 3, then on August 3 and the third time on November
1. Around this time, Prince Charles entered the scene, and then
we heard he was visiting Pakistan and would be pleading with
President Musharraf for clemency in Mirza Tahir’s case.
On November 16, the President commuted Mirza Tahir’s death
sentence and a convicted killer walked out of jail, was given
VIP treatment and secretly flown out of Pakistan,” he
said.
Jamshed’s brother Gul Rabi insisted that President
Musharraf acted illegally while commuting Mirza Tahir’s
death sentence. “The President had already exhausted his
powers when he rejected the mercy petition. He, along with Prime
Minister Shaukat Aziz and Interior Minister Aftab Sherpao, flouted
the law of the land by releasing a man about to be awarded capital
punishment. We got justice from the courts, but our rulers deprived
us of our rights. Only the family had the right to forgive Mirza
Tahir,” he contended.
An agitated Gul Rabi pointed out that his family not
only lost Jamshed, but also suffered huge financial losses.
He said for 18 years his family fought for justice in the courts
and spent a lot of money in the process. “We couldn’t
concentrate on our business. We cut expenses and made our children
suffer so that we could cover the legal costs. And finally we
had the satisfaction of having won justice for our innocent
brother. Now that feeling too is gone,” he argued.
Habibullah, another uncle of the late Jamshed, said Mirza
Tahir’s release was a bigger tragedy for the family than
his nephew’s murder. “It is like a slow death for
members of our family. The President could have ordered 10 of
us to be beheaded, and we would have accepted that. But releasing
that man convicted for murder is sheer injustice, and it happened
because we are poor,” he maintained.
Sohbat Khan complained that the government also tried
to pressure his family by sending tribal jirgas and politicians
with the plea to forgive Mirza Tahir. He complained that some
of the jirgas violated tribal norms. “First, former federal
minister Lt Gen (Retd) Majeed Malik sent a message for me to
meet him in Chakwal. Normally in our culture, mediators and
members of a jirga go to the victim’s home and seek forgiveness.
Still, I travelled to Chakwal and met the retired general. However,
I didn’t accept his request to forgive Mirza Tahir. Then
Chakwal district nazim Sardar Ghulam Abbas approached me through
someone and I met him in a neutral place in Rawalpindi. I gave
him the same answer,” he recalled.
Subsequently, on April 24 this year, Sohbat Khan said
a 30-member jirga from Mohmand Agency in NWFP, led by Malik
Sobedar Khan, met him in his Rawalpindi home. “They came
without intimation and after sunset, sent by the political agent
of Mohmand Agency, a tribal area to which our family originally
belongs. This is not the way in which jirgas operate,”
he recalled. He said two more jirgas of 24 and 28 tribal elders
were sent by the political agent of Mohmand Agency later, on
August 2 and August 9, respectively, in the company of tehsildar
Naeemullah. Then a three-member jirga, including Ghazi Ahmad
and Malik Zafar Khan, came, followed by another one led by PML
president for Fata, Malik Zahir Shah Afridi. He said the last
one was sent by interior minister Sherpao. “Mr Sherpao
should have approached us himself and we would have gone to
his place. We would have even forgiven Mirza Tahir if he had
constituted a proper jirga in keeping with Pakhtun traditions,”
he asserted.
Sohbat Khan also narrated the circumstances in which
PML president Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain and general secretary
Mushahid Hussain Syed met him and his relations at the home
of their lawyer, Malik Rab Nawaz Noon, in Rawalpindi. The meeting
took place on June 4, 2006. “They told us that they didn’t
know Mirza Tahir. However, Chaudhry Shujaat and Mushahid Hussain
said they had been sent by their superiors, which could mean
the President or the Prime Minister. They told us there were
two options. One was forgiving the killer, for Allah’s
sake. They didn’t tell us the second option, which we
felt was payment of blood-money,” he recalled.
When asked why they didn’t accept blood-money,
both Sohbat Khan and Gul Rabi said it would have been dishonourable
in view of their strict tribal traditions. Sohbat Khan stated
that they had spurned all offers of blood-money and other temptations
because Mirza Tahir’s family had initially tried to influence
the eyewitnesses. “We are poor, but we have our honour.
Mirza Tahir’s family thought they would pay us off and
secure his release,” he stated. Gul Rabi said he heard
about an Arab philanthropist willing to give his family 50 visas
and jobs in the UAE in return for forgiveness for Mirza Tahir.
“We weren’t interested in any such offer. All we
wanted was justice for my innocent brother Jamshed,” he
contended. Sohbat Khan had this to say about the offer of the
UAE visas: “I said in an interview that the UAE was hot
and not a very comfortable place. I said, ‘Even if we
are offered 50 visas for the UK, we won’t agree, even
though Britain is a much better place than the UAE.”.
Sohbat Khan recalled
that Mirza Tahir had written to him admitting his guilt and
seeking forgiveness for murdering Jamshed. “I also met
Mirza Tahir in Kot Lakhpat jail when a man named Shafiq hailing
from Kamonke approached me. Shafiq had been in the same prison
and had been asked by Mirza Tahir to approach me after his release.
On that occasion also, Mirza Tahir asked me to forgive him,”
he said. He added it was a closed case and his family was relieved
that the convicted killer was soon going to meet his fate. “We
were mistaken. We as the aggrieved party weren’t even
told when he was freed and flown out of Pakistan,” he
complained.
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