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19 churches gutted in Pakistan’s Jaranwala violence: Report

The report indicated that a total of over 400 houses were impacted. Among these, 89 houses belonging to Christians, including those of pastors and priests, were completely gutted, while 15 houses faced partial destruction….reports Asian Lite News

A total of 19 churches were fully gutted and 89 Christian houses burnt down in recent violence targeting the Christian community in Jaranwala in Faisalabad, according to a fact-finding report of the Human Rights Focus Pakistan (HRFP).

The HRFP report stated that in the August 16 Jaranwala mob attack on churches and Christians, a total of 19 churches were burnt fully while two churches and some prayer rooms/community halls were also affected.

It further said over 400 houses were affected in total with 89 Christian houses including those of pastors and priests being completely gutted while 15 houses were partially destroyed.

The report stated that over 10,000 Christians had hid in sugar cane and other fields, during the first nights of attack.

The HRFP said its report was based on direct information and evidence through the fact-finding mission trip to the sites of the incident, interviews of victims, families, local residents, church leaders, neighbourhoods, journalists, police officials, local authorities, political workers and different stakeholders.

The HRFP team met in person with more than 150 victims and families and church leaders who shared their stories about victimizations and religious persecutions, losses and immediate needs to help them urgently and for longer time, the report stated. 

The HRFP fact-finding team observed that household items were looted, and the rest were burnt. It said that since the people fled on time, they managed to escape. The human rights team said that most of those who fled are in facing traumatic conditions with several people sustaining injuries and a few women reporting abuses. Most of them were afraid that they did not want to return to their homes ever, the report said.

FIR was registered on the August 16, morning, under sections 295B and 295C of the Pakistan Penal Code against two Christian men. FIR stated that the two Christians living in Jaranwala has blasphemed against Holy Quran and Muhammad Mustafa (PBUH) by using insulting words against Islam and Prophet Muhammad.

FIR has registered by police ASI on the complaint of Muhammad Afzal, Noor Hussain and Muhammad Toheed, supported by religious groups and the people who have been biased with Shaukat Masih as well. Both the accused are on judicial remand and have appeared at court hearings through video link due to high-security reasons, HRFP stated.

HRFP said that it had learnt from survivors that different Islamic religious groups, local clerics and religious fundamentalists supported and facilitated the attackers. Announcements by the cleric of a local mosque further provoked people.

Naveed Walter, President of HRFP, said in blasphemy cases against minorities, it has never been proven if someone ever truly committed blasphemy. But never the accusers have been brought to justice.

The same situation was seen in Sawan Masih’s case of Joseph Colony, who spent 7 years in jail while the accuser never has been asked on that level why he accused falsely. In Rimsha’s case, even the religious cleric Hafiz Muhammad Khalid was proven guilty that he did trap Rimsha in a blasphemy case, but the court gave him relief. Asia Bibi was convicted of blasphemy in 2010 and was released in 2018 after a Supreme Court decision proving her innocent but her accusers have never been questioned on those levels, Walter said.

Naveed Walter said, until serious actions of the state and the establishment of a strategy and strict policy against such mob attacks, the same incidents would be repeated as in 2021 when a Sri Lankan national was burnt alive.

In 2014 Kot Radha Kishan Kasur a couple was burnt alive. In 2013 Joseph Colony Lahore attacked burnt houses and churches.

The 2010 attack on Warispura Faisalabad destroyed houses, churches and shops. In 2009 Gojra and Korian attack destroyed and burnt houses and churches including 7 people were burnt alive.

In 2005 the Christians of Sangla Hill were attacked leaving Christian families devastated. In 1997 Shantinagar village was attacked, houses and Churches were burnt to ashes and now a Jaranwala incident, Naveed Walter, President of HRFP said.

The accusers should be held accountable and questioned from the beginning. If they couldn’t prove their allegations against the accused then they should be brought to justice, Walter added.

According to the HRFP president there is a huge difference between accusations of any minority by Muslims and accusations against Muslims by their own religion of blasphemy.

“When an individual member of the minority community is being accused then the whole community has to suffer while when a Muslim is being accused, only the individual gets hurt. We condemn however the blasphemy accusation at any person belonging to any religion or faith and there should not be a space for any type of justification,” he said.

Naveed Walter said the repeal of blasphemy laws and changing the mindsets of Islamists and the general public could be a milestone if they are serious and sincere about making Pakistan a truly democratic and progressive country. Otherwise, the same incidents would continue, and only the condemnations would be continuing, he added. Even a longer time could not fulfil the trauma of victims, women and children in particular that fled in fear and spent nights with no roof over their heads, he added.

Naveed Walter said that the police and court culture is discouraging religion-based cases, like blasphemy and abductions, forced conversions and forced marriages of minority girls. Such discriminatory laws and practices and violence are one of the main reasons why minorities internally or externally relocate got a chance in such situations.

He said the 23 per cent of minorities reached 5 per cent while the above 90 extra judicial killings have been noticed in blasphemy cases only. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Pakistan sets up special court for Army Act & OSA related cases

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Pakistan sets up special court for Army Act & OSA related cases

The special court will be headed by Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) court number 1’s judge Abdul Hasnatt…reports Hamza Ameer

The caretaker government in Pakistan has constituted a special court in Islamabad to hear the critical Cipher case against former Prime Minister Imran Khan, former Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and his associates, as well as all other cases in which charges are framed under the Official Secrets Act (OSA) and Army Act 1952.

The special court will be headed by Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) court number 1’s judge Abdul Hasnat, while proceedings into all cases that come under the two Acts will be heard in the Judicial Complex building in Islamabad. 

The development comes after President Arif Alvi denied the approval of two amendment bills (Army Act Amendment Bill 2023 & Official Secrets Act Amendment Bill 2023), stating that his staff at the Prime Minister’s Office undermined his demand and acted against his directive to return the bill to Parliament. 

“As God is my witness, I did not sign Official Secrets Amendment Bill 2023 & Pakistan Army Amendment Bill 2023 as I disagreed with these laws. I asked my staff to return the bills unsigned within stipulated time to make them ineffective. I confirmed from them many times that whether they have been returned & was assured that they were. However I have found out today that my staff undermined my will and command. As Allah knows all, He will forgive IA. But I ask forgiveness from those who will be effected,” the President said in a tweet. 

Alvi’s tweet came over a day after it was reported that he had signed and approved both the bills.

These developments have stirred yet another conspiracy as many are questioning the timing of the tweet and have also expressed reservations over the intent of President Alvi, who they say, may have flouted his own public office to show his affiliation with Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI). 

“Its shocking to see how President Alvi, who is not only the head of the state, he is the commander in chief of the Pakistan armed forces also, has presented himself as powerless, helpless and extremely weak to the extent that he couldn’t even manage his own office and its staff in handling such a sensitive matter.” said Javed Siddique, a political analyst. 

Legal experts have a different view of the interpretation of the powers and procedures of the President in issuing his assent of dissent on any bill that is sent to the President by the parliament. 

“Article 75 of the Constitution of Pakistan gives two options to the President. Once a bill is approved from the National Assembly and the Senate, it is sent to the President for approval. He then has the stipulated time of 10 days to either give his assent on the bill and sign it, or he can return the bill with a letter detailing his concerns over the bill and requesting a reconsideration,” said Hafiz Ahsaan Ahmed Khokhar, an advocate of the Supreme Court of Pakistan. 

“If the President does not respond in the stipulated time, and he does not assent nor does he return the bill with his recommendations, it is deemed to have been assented and becomes a law,” he added. 

The lawyer also explained that if President returns the bills unsigned and with his recommendations, a joint session of Parliament will be called in to review the recommendations and pass the bill again through majority vote.

After approval from the joint session, the bill will again ne sent to the President for assent within a 10-day stipulated time.  

“After the joint session approval, President has 10 days to give his assent. Otherwise, the bill is deemed to have been assented and becomes law,” Ahsaan added. 

On the other hand, other senior lawyers maintain that two crucial amendments cannot be deemed as assented when President has not signed them, nor has returned them with recommendations. 

“If, in the first stage, the president has received the bills and has not signed them nor has he returned the bills in stipulated time — this is no way can be understood as deemed to have been assented. Either way, the parliament has to call in a joint session and approve the same bills again and send them back to the president for assent,” said senior lawyer Salman Akram Raja. 

Political experts say that President Alvi has opened up a new Pandora’s Box in which his own staff and office has been pushed into severe scrutiny.  

“President Alvi has put his own credibility at stake, his office under questions, his position as president at risk. Instead of taking action against his staff for their conduct and alleged undermining of his orders, he opted to take it to public domain and tweet about it. This is strange,” said senior journalist Shahzeb Khanzada. 

The Army Act and Official Secrets Act are being applied in the Cipher case against Khan and Qureshi, who have been booked for mishandling and sharing details of a secret document regarding meeting between American diplomat Donald Lu and Pakistan’s then Ambassador Asad Majeed, details of which were later used by the former premier to spread his narrative of US-led regime change against his government. 

ALSO READ: 10,000 evacuated as Sutlej River floods Pakistan

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Karnataka CM condemns vandalism of Gandhi statue

The incident came to light on Monday…reports Asian Lite News

Karnataka Chief  Minister Siddaramaiah on Monday condemned the incident in which unidentified miscreants vandalised the statue of Mahatma Gandhi in Holehonnuru village of Shivamogga district. He has also warned that the guilty in the case would be punished.

“I severely condemn the anti-national act of vandalising the statue of Mahatma Gandhi. Those who have scantiest respect for the freedom movement of this land, Constitution and law can indulge in this heinous act. We will initiate strict action and sternly punish those who are behind this lowly act. I request the people not to take law into their hands and maintain peace, law and order in the society,” Siddaramaiah stated.     

The incident came to light on Monday.

The police have rushed to the spot and begun an investigation in the case. Police explain that the statue was installed at the main junction of the village 18 years ago.

The reason for the vandalisation has not been ascertained yet. However, police have started recording the statements in this regard. The statue has been totally vandalised and the people of the village have condemned the act, urging the police to initiate action against the culprits. 

ALSO READ-Rahul Gandhi’s Lok Sabha membership restored

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Sikh man charged in connection with stabbing at Southall community event

Singh has been remanded in custody to appear at Isleworth Crown Court on September 14, 2023, the Metropolitan Police said in a statement…reports Asian Lite News

A 25-year-old Sikh man has been charged in connection with the stabbing of two people during a community event in Southall in London, police said.

Gurpreet Singh, a resident of Belmont Road in Ilford, appeared at Uxbridge Magistrates’ Court on Thursday where he was charged with the offences.

His charges include one count of attempted grievous bodily harm with intent; two counts of grievous bodily harm with intent; one count of affray; one count of threats with a bladed article and two counts of possession of a bladed article.

Singh has been remanded in custody to appear at Isleworth Crown Court on September 14, 2023, the Metropolitan Police said in a statement.

The court heard that at around 22:00 hrs on August 15, officers were policing an Indian Independence Day street event in The Broadway, Southall, when a member of the public informed them of an altercation that had taken place.

They found two men in their 30s with knife injuries and took them to a hospital where their injuries were assessed as not life-threatening. They have since been discharged.

Police arrested two men at the scene, including Singh and a 20-year-old man who has been released on police bail pending further enquiries.

A female officer, involved in detaining one of those arrested, sustained a small cut to her hand. She did not need hospital treatment.

Superintendent Sean Lynch, responsible for neighbourhood policing in Ealing, said: “I recognise the enormous concern this incident will have caused, both in Southall and in the Sikh communities around London and further afield, in what was an otherwise largely peaceful and celebratory event.”

Lynch also mentioned about a video of the incident circulating on social media and urged people to stop speculating.

“We are aware of footage circulating on social media, with people also commenting on what they think happened. We would urge people to avoid echoing or adding to the speculation. Fortunately, none of those injured were seriously hurt and there were no fatalities,” Lynch said.

An investigation is ongoing and is being led by detectives from West Area CID. Following the incident, a Section 35 Dispersal Order that was authorised in the area has since been removed.

ALSO READ-Sikh Individual Graduates US Marine Boot Camp Embracing Articles of Faith

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Probe team grills Imran in Attock jail over ‘missing cipher copy’

The FIA launched investigations against the ex-prime minister for allegedly making public a confidential diplomatic cable and keeping it in his possession….reports Asian Lite News

A joint investigation team (JIT) of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) interrogated former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan inside the Attock jail, in a case related to the cable gate saga, ARY News reported on Wednesday.

The matter pertains to March last year when the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) Chairman brandished a letter claiming that it was evidence of an “international conspiracy” backed by the US to topple his government.

Last month, the probe agency had grilled the deposed prime minister — who was removed from office via a no-confidence motion in April last year — for nearly two hours in the case after the Lahore High Court (LHC) withdrew a stay order against the call-up notice to Khan by the FIA into the audio leak involving the US diplomatic cable, ARY News reported.

The FIA launched investigations against the ex-prime minister for allegedly making public a confidential diplomatic cable and keeping it in his possession.

Earlier today, FIA’s Counter-Terrorism Wing registered a case in connection with the “missing cipher” from the official record of the Prime Minister’s Office and indicted Khan in the case, ARY News reported citing well-placed sources said.

They also confirmed that the JIT grilled Khan in Attock jail on Tuesday (yesterday). “The JIT met Khan in the office of the deputy superintendent jail,” according to FIA sources.

Last week, reports emerged that the JIT probing the cipher issue was nearing the conclusion of its findings but the latest publication of alleged content of the secret cable document in an online American news organisation has forced it to expand its investigation to cover the aspect of the leak to the media.

ARY News reported citing sources said the JIT was keen to see how and who had leaked the document’s content to the media and whether the content of the cipher, as shared by The Intercept, is original or exaggerated.

Last month, the cipher case took a new turn when PTI Chairman’s then-principal secretary Azam Khan “recorded” a statement, terming the US cipher a “conspiracy” used by the ex-PM to “manipulate for creating a narrative against establishment and opposition.

Azam, who had been “missing” since June this year, recorded his statement under CrPC 164 before a magistrate, ARY News reported citing sources.

Imran, while making the claims did not reveal the contents of the letter nor mention the name of the nation that had sent it. But a few days later, he named the United States and said that “Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Affairs Donald Lu had sought his removal”.

Months later, two audio leaks took the internet by storm and shocked the public after these events. The former prime minister, then-federal minister Asad Umar, and Azam could allegedly be heard discussing the US cipher and how to use it in their interest, as per ARY News.

Meanwhile, the ousted premier is behind bars at Attock Jail after a trial court in Islamabad found him guilty of concealing proceeds of Toshakhana (state depository) gifts that he received from foreign dignitaries as the prime minister of the country from 2018 to 2022, and sentenced him to three years in prison along with a fine of PKR 1,00,000.

Subsequently, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) disqualified him for five years from holding public office following his conviction. (ANI)

ALSO READ: Afghanistan’s swift fall to Taliban exposed US, Pakistan intel flaws

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Trump indicted in Georgia 2020 election probe

The former president is accused of violating the Peach State’s anti-racketeering law, conspiring, making false statements, and encouraging a public official to neglect their oath…reports Asian Lite News

Former President of the United States Donald Trump was indicted by the Georgia grand jury in connection with the efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in the Peach State, New York Post reported on Tuesday.

The charges, brought late on Monday by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis charge Trump, the front-runner in the race for the 2024 Republican nomination and 18 associates for a scheme intended to reverse his loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

It reported, the charge against the former president includes violation of the Peach State’s anti-racketeering law, conspiracy, false statements, and asking a public official to violate their oath of office.

According to the New York Post, all 19 defendants are charged with Georgia’s equivalent of the federal RICO statute, which can be used against any group of individuals deemed to use criminal means to attain an objective. The acronym refers to the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.

“[The] Defendants … [30] unindicted co-conspirators … and others known and unknown to the Grand Jury, constituted a criminal organization whose members and associates engaged in … false statements and writings, impersonating a public officer, forgery, filing false documents, influencing witnesses, computer theft, computer trespass, computer invasion of privacy, conspiracy to defraud the state, acts involving theft, and perjury,” the 98-page indictment read.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who launched the investigation into Trump and his associates nearly two years ago, told reporters at a late-night press conference that she intended to try all 19 defendants together and that they would be given less than two weeks to turn themselves in.

“I am giving the defendants the opportunity to voluntarily surrender no later than noon on Friday the 25th day of August 2023,” Willis said.

Hoping to move quickly, Willis added that her office will be seeking to take the case to trial “within the next six months.” If approved by a judge, that would make Georgia the first jurisdiction and Willis the first prosecutor to put a former American president on trial.

Trump denounces fourth indictment

Coming out hard after his fourth indictment, former US President Donald Trump on Tuesday claimed that he will produce an “irrefutable” report that “should” lead to all charges against him getting dropped, New York Post reported.

“A Large, Complex, Detailed but Irrefutable REPORT on the Presidential Election Fraud which took place in Georgia is almost complete & will be presented by me at a major News Conference at 11:00 A.M. on Monday of next week in Bedminster, New Jersey. Based on the results of this CONCLUSIVE Report, all charges should be dropped against me & others – There will be a complete EXONERATION! They never went after those that Rigged the Election. They only went after those that fought to find the RIGGERS!” Trump said on ‘Truth Social’ platform.

The charges, against the former President was brought by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

The raps against him include violating Georgia’s anti-racketeering law, conspiracy, false statements, and asking a public official to violate their oath of office, New York Post reported.

Right after the indictment, Trump denounced the ruling and called the situation a “total shutdown of democracy”.

“These monsters, all controlled and coordinated by the DOJ and Radical Left Lunatics, are Criminalizing Political Speech, a total SHUTDOWN OF DEMOCRACY!” Trump stated on Truth Social.

“WITCH HUNT!” he added in a subsequent post.

ALSO READ: Trump indicted again

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Trump indicted again

Those indicted, including the former president, have until Friday to surrender….reports Asian Lite News

Former US President Donald Trump was charged along with 18 alleged accomplices in connection with attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election count in the state of Georgia.

Late Monday night, Trump was charged with 13 counts, including violating Georgia state’s racketeering act.

The other charges were about soliciting a public officer, conspiring to impersonate a public officer, conspiring to commit forgery in the first degree and conspiring to file false documents.

Besides Trump, the others who were indicted included the former President personal attorney Rudy Giuliani and many members of his legal team who led efforts to overturn the 2020 election outcome not only in Georgia but also other states, which are not included in the Monday indictment, such as Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan.

Those indicted, including the former president, have until Friday to surrender.

These charges emerged from an investigation launched by Georgia’s Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis into a phone call from Trump to Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in January 2020.

“What I want to do is this,” Trump said in the call with Raffensperger, according to the recording.

“I just want to find, uh, 11,780 votes, which is one more than (the 11,779 vote margin of defeat) we have, because we won the state.”

The Fulsome County indictment is the fourth for the former president, following, in the order listed, charges of paying off an adult film star to keep quiet about an affair (filed by New York City), mishandling official papers from his presidency (filed by Justice Department), conspiring to overturn the 2020 presidential election (filed by the Justice Department).

The former president has countered these indictments by calling them politically motivated, to prevent him, the leading candidate for the Republican nomination for the 2024 president election. 

Trump has already been charged by federal prosecutors in Washington D.C. with conspiring to overturn the 2020 election, which he lost to incumbent President Joe Biden. 

The former President has pleaded not guilty in all the cases.

ALSO READ: Trump’s right to free speech on Jan 6 event not absolute, says judge

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Report sounds alarm over increase in suicides among elderly in US

CDC’s Chief Medical Officer Debra Houry said that the troubling increase in suicides requires immediate action across society to address the staggering loss of life from tragedies that are preventable…reports Asian Lite News

A new report has sounded an alarm over an increase in suicide cases, especially among the older population in the US, as nearly 50,000 Americans died by suicide in 2022.

According to the report published by US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there is an 8.1 per cent rise in suicide deaths among adults aged 65 and older in just one year.

In 2022, 10,433 people, above the age of 65, died by suicide and in 2021, the number was 9,652.

The provisional estimates released today indicate that suicide deaths further increased in 2022, rising from 48,183 deaths in 2021 to an estimated 49,449 deaths in 2022, an increase of approximately 2.6 per cent, as per the report.

However, two groups did see a decline in numbers, American Indian and Alaska Native people (down 6.1 per cent) and people 10-24 years old (down 8.4 per cent).

“Nine in ten Americans believe America is facing a mental health crisis. The new suicide death data reported by CDC illustrates why. One life lost to suicide is one too many. Yet, too many people still believe asking for help is a sign of weakness,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.

“The Biden-Harris Administration is making unprecedented investments to transform how mental health is understood, accessed and treated as part of President Biden’s Unity Agenda. We must continue to eliminate the stigmatization of mental health and make care available to all Americans,” he added.

CDC’s Chief Medical Officer Debra Houry said that the troubling increase in suicides requires immediate action across society to address the staggering loss of life from tragedies that are preventable.

She further stated that everyone can play a role in efforts to save lives and reverse the rise in suicide deaths.”

“Today’s report underscores the depths of the devastating mental health crisis in America. Mental health has become the defining public health and societal challenge of our time. Far too many people and their families are suffering and feeling alone,” said US Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, MD, MBA, the report read.

“These numbers are a sobering reminder of how urgent it is that we further expand access to mental health care, address the root causes of mental health struggles, and recognize the importance of checking on and supporting one another. If you or a loved one are in emotional distress or suicidal crisis, please know that your life matters and that you are not alone. The 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7 for anyone who needs help,” he added.

Last week, CDC announced seven new recipients in CDC’s Comprehensive Suicide Prevention Program (CSP), now funding 24 programs to implement and evaluate a comprehensive public health approach to suicide prevention, with a special focus on populations that are disproportionately affected by suicide. CDC’s Suicide Prevention Resource for Action offers states and communities evidence-based strategies to prevent suicide, according to the report. (ANI)

ALSO READ-Alarming rise in suicide attacks in Pakistan

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‘Taliban’s treatment of women is crime against humanity’

The Taliban swept back into power two years ago this month, as western forces and diplomats hastily withdrew…reports Asian Lite News

Former prime minister Gordon Brown has called on the International Criminal Court to prosecute the Taliban for crimes against humanity over the “systematic brutalisation of women and girls” in Afghanistan

Brown also urged the UK government and its allies to impose sanctions on regime officials responsible for the near-total exclusion of women and girls from education and the workplace.

The Taliban swept back into power two years ago this month, as western forces and diplomats hastily withdrew.

Their initial promises of a more moderate rule than that between 1996 and 2001, during which they were unrecognised by most of the outside world, has proved hollow.

The triumph of hardliners within the Taliban movement meant girls were excluded first from secondary school then from all education. Women were barred from working for aid organisations, prompting most to suspend operations there.

The Taliban had already insisted on segregated aid distributions, so without female workers Afghan women could no longer be helped. Last month there was a rare protest by Afghan women in Kabul after the Taliban decreed that beauty salons, one of the last public spaces open to women, be closed as “un-Islamic”.

Brown, the United Nations’ special envoy for global education, said the evidence of crimes against humanity being committed by the Taliban since their return to power was “overwhelming”.

“They’ve been excluded from education, excluded from employment, excluded from visiting public places,” he told the BBC. “It’s probably the most heinous, the most vicious, the most comprehensive abuse of human rights that’s taking place around the world today. And it is systematically being inflicted on millions of girls and women across Afghanistan. And that’s why the United Nations and others are calling it gender discrimination. Some call it gender apartheid. That’s why it’s seen as a crime against humanity — and it’s right, then, for the international criminal court, which has responsibility for dealing with crimes against humanity, to both investigate and to prosecute those people who have been responsible for this crime.”

Taliban fire shots, beat women protesters in Kabul.

Brown voiced support for sanctions against the Taliban as an entity, which have not been imposed since the takeover. “What we need is a prosecution,” he said. “But we also need sanctions. I’m urging the UK government to sanction the individuals responsible for this policy. The European Union has done it, but America and others can do it.”

Only financial sanctions relating to some Taliban leaders have remained in force since 1999. A 2021 resolution by the UN security council allowed for the provision of humanitarian aid to Afghanistan without breaking international law on sanctions.

Brown said he was shocked that there is “so little international pressure on the regime”, suggesting that the pressure of a potential prosecution could force the Taliban to rethink its approach. He also urged leaders and clerics from Muslim-majority countries to help persuade the Taliban that “Islam is a religion that values women and girls” and denounce the misuse of Islam as a means to deny them rights.

ALSO READ-Report slams Taliban interference in humanitarian aid  

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Dubai Court denies early release for convicted killers after 15 years

The Dubai Criminal Court, in a 2007 ruling, sentenced the five men to 10 years for murder followed by deportation…reports Asian Lite News

 A Dubai court has turned down an appeal for early release by a group of five men from India and Pakistan, who were convicted of murdering a security guard more than 17 years ago.

The men were found guilty of killing the guard at a building site in Jebel Ali in January 2006, and were sentenced to 25 years of life imprisonment by a Dubai Court of Appeal in 2007, The National newspaper reported.

Having served 15 years in prison already, the men were unable to convince the judges at the Dubai Court of Appeal with the documents presented on Monday.

The court heard that the men were part of a 10-member gang who in January 2006 broke into the building site to steal 100 metres of cable worth Dh3,300.

The five broke into the site, stole the cables and assaulted and strangled the security guard.

Their other accomplices were identified as the driver, two who kept a lookout and two who helped to break into the building site.

The robbers then loaded the stolen cable into a vehicle and drove to Sharjah where they sold it and divided the money among themselves.

The guard, whose age and nationality was not revealed, had tried to confront the robbers.

His body was found the next morning by his brother who reported the matter to Dubai Police.

While eight men were apprehended locally, two had escaped to Oman.

They were arrested by Omani authorities and extradited to the UAE, The National reported.

The Dubai Criminal Court, in a 2007 ruling, sentenced the five men to 10 years for murder followed by deportation.

Their five accomplices received half of that sentence with deportation.

However, the Dubai Court of Appeal revised the sentences later that year, with the primary culprits receiving a life imprisonment sentence, which is 25 years.

Their accomplices had their sentences doubled to 10 years.

While a fresh appeal can be submitted in two years, Hassan Elhais of Al Rowaad Advocates told The National that request for an early release is examined by a dedicated committee as per the UAE laws.

Elhais said the committee evaluated the behaviour of each prisoner during their jail term and the potential threat they might pose upon release.

“The committee’s focus isn’t on the initial crime or the ensuing circumstances as that’s the purview of the sentencing judges,” he told The National.

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