A
70-year-old British national, sentenced to death in Pakistan for
committing blasphemy, is being treated in hospital after he was shot and
wounded in prison, officials said.
Mohammad Asghar, a Scottish man of Pakistani origin, was convicted in January for claiming to be a prophet of Islam.
Asghar, who
was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia in the UK in 2010, had
declared his prophethood in court and included a reference to it on his
business card, a government prosecutor said at the time of his trial.
Abdul
Majeed, a police official at the Saddar police station in Rawalpindi
told the AFP news agency, “A prison official in his early twenties
transported an illegal weapon inside the prison this morning and shot an
inmate.”
Majeed added that the accused was in custody and would face charges for attempted murder and possession of an illegal weapon.
A doctor at
the hospital where Asghar was first brought said: “One patient was
brought here who had been shot from the back and the bullet has crossed
his body affecting his ribs and lungs.”
“He is out of danger now,” he added.
The British
High Commission in Islamabad – the de facto embassy – confirmed the
prison shooting of a national and said it was providing consular
assistance.
Asghar’s family in January urged the British government to intervene to bring him home, saying he had attempted suicide in jail.
They also said the allegations against Asghar stemmed from a property dispute with one of his tenants.
No comments:
Post a Comment