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Pakistan to hang 'butcher of Swat' Muslim Khan

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Muslim Khan was the face of the Swat Taliban for many months


A military court in Pakistan has sentenced a top Pakistani Taliban leader from the Swat region to death.

Muslim Khan, a former spokesman for the militants, was convicted of killing 31 people, including civilians and security personnel, the military said.

He is among eight "terrorists" whose death penalty was confirmed by army chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa.

The military courts were set up in the aftermath of the 2014 Peshawar school massacre. Their term expires next week.

Others whose convictions were confirmed by the army chief on Wednesday include four gunmen sentenced for involvement in a 2015 bus massacre of Ismaili Shias in Karachi, and the assassination of social activist Sabeen Mahmud, also in Karachi the same year.

Why 'butcher of Swat'?
Muslim Khan, 62, started out as a student activist of a left-wing secular party in the 1960s, but underwent an ideological transformation in the early 1990s when a pre-Taliban Islamist movement briefly emerged in his native Swat region.

In 2007, he became the chief spokesman of the Swat Taliban, and was the movement's public face during its stranglehold over the region which continued until the winter of 2009.

His forceful defence of the Taliban's policy of killings, beheadings and the destruction of schools in Swat earned him and Swat Taliban chief Mullah Fazlullah the title of "butchers of Swat".

The military's statement described him as "a spokesman of a proscribed organisation [who] was involved in killing innocent civilians, attacking armed forces and law enforcement agencies of Pakistan".

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Muslim Khan, pictured in 2009 after his arrest

These attacks resulted in the death of 31 people and injuries to 69 others, the statement said, adding that he was involved in "slaughtering" four soldiers.

"He was also involved in kidnapping two Chinese engineers and a local civilian for ransom. The convict admitted his offences before the Magistrate and the trial court. He was awarded the death sentence."

A former BBC Urdu correspondent, Abdul Hai Kakar, who met him in September 2009, reported that he spoke several languages, including Urdu, English, Arabic and Persian, in addition to his mother tongue Pashto.

He had lived in or travelled across more than a dozen countries in the Middle East, Europe, the US and the Far East.

He has been in custody since his arrest in 2009 during the military operation that drove the Taliban out of Swat.

Was the trial fair?
The military court trials are held in secret, and prisoners on trial are held in internment centres run by the military, away from the mainstream jail population.

Scores of suspects have been convicted by the military courts since they were set up in January 2015 - obtaining accurate information is difficult because secrecy makes it almost impossible to scrutinise the process.

Dawn newspaper said more than 270 cases had been sent to the military courts in the past two years. They gave death sentences to 161 people, while 116 were given jail terms, mostly life sentences.

A report by the Geneva-based International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) in June had a lower figure, saying the military courts had convicted more than 100 people, "possibly including children".

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The attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar was the deadliest militant attack in Pakistan's history

So far only 12 suspects have been executed by the military courts.

Others have gone to the courts to challenge the fairness of the trials, but judges have failed to intervene.

The ICJ has accused the Pakistani authorities of failing to make public key information about the trials, with similar objections raised by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) and other groups.

The BBC asked the Interior Ministry for information on cases tried by the military courts but has not yet received a response.

What happens to military courts now?
The convictions made public on Wednesday are believed to be the last by military courts before their legal term expires in January 2017.

It is not clear if their term will be extended.

Elements within the military want the term of the military courts extended, believing the government is not up to dealing with terrorism-related offences.

But rights groups and some political circles say law and order has improved and the justification for military courts no longer exists.


bbc
 
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He had forfeited all his rights the day he killed the first innocent person. He has lived and still breathing seven years after his arrest ............... this bonus time should be enough compensation to make up for his whatever rights the human rights commission is demanding.

I remember how this butcher had boasted on live TV "Taliban kabi hathyar nai daltay" ............... considering his own statement please rid him of his misery he must be living in shame these days.
 
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Muslim Khan, 62, started out as a student activist of a left-wing secular party in the 1960s, but underwent an ideological transformation in the early 1990s when a pre-Taliban Islamist movement briefly emerged in his native Swat region..

That's one heck of an ideological turnaround- makes you think.
 
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Brothers and sisters, we are Muslim. Please, let us not insult the deceased. He was bad in his life, but he is gone now. Allah will judge him.
 
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He was arrested in 2009 so why it took so many years...that speaks volumes for the inefficiency of our judicial system that it took them 7 years to announce and punish the terrorist. Also such people should be beheaded publicly and then their corps is thrown or burnt but not given an Islamic funeral and who ever tries to offer, is shot dead.
 
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Good..:yahoo::yahoo:
Hang this son of bitch and others like him.They have done enough.Now its time to make an example of them.:sniper::sniper:
Their elimination will make us walk peacefully in our country:pakistan:
 
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He was arrested in 2009 so why it took so many years...that speaks volumes for the inefficiency of our judicial system that it took them 7 years to announce and punish the terrorist. Also such people should be beheaded publicly and then their corps is thrown or burnt but not given an Islamic funeral and who ever tries to offer, is shot dead.

Well from 2008-2013 we had the shazada hakoomat of zardari which placed a moratorium on hangings and it was only after 16 December 2014 that we actually lifted the moratorium. However this quick justice is only bcz of military courts.
 
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Electric chair would be better treatment..

Well from 2008-2013 we had the shazada hakoomat of zardari which placed a moratorium on hangings and it was only after 16 December 2014 that we actually lifted the moratorium. However this quick justice is only bcz of military courts.

Zardari must have made an offshore fortune by suspending hang to death sentence...his assets needs to be investigated further..
 
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Too late but good..They should not be kept in custody for so long .Direct justice on spot should be the way for these people
 
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