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Peshawar High Court sets aside sentences of 74 convicted by military court

Ali Tariq

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Updated October 18, 2018

5bc8a1370b16a.jpg

A file photo showing the Peshawar High Court's building.

The Peshawar High Court (PHC) on Thursday set aside the punishments awarded to 74 convicts by military courts in various cases of terrorism.

Accepting their appeals against the military courts' verdicts, a two-member bench comprising Chief Justice Waqar Ahmad Seth and Justice Lal Jan Khattak overturned the death and life sentences that were handed to the convicts.

The court overturned their sentences after concluding that the charges against the accused had not been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.

Though a short order, the bench ordered that the convicts be released. Nearly 50 of them had been sentenced to death, while the rest were serving jail terms.

The cases of three out of the 74 convicts whose sentences were overturned today are highlighted below:

Gul Faraz
Convict Gul Faraz of Dir was charged with the preparation, facilitation and transportation of a suicide bomber to a funeral site in Mardan where he blew himself up, killing dozens of people, including MPA Imran Mohmand, and leaving scores injured.

He was sentenced to death by a military court, a verdict that was challenged in the high court by his nephew Zrawar Khan under Article 199 of the Constitution, under which a high court may take up a matter when there is no other adequate remedy provided by law.

While allowing the writ petition, the two-member PHC bench overturned the death sentence and ordered Faraz's release.

He was acquitted on the grounds of: absence of substantial evidence, except for a confessional statement that was recorded after a lapse of years following the convict's arrest; the trial being unfair; violation of Articles 4, 10-A, 12 and 25 of the Constitution as well as of Section 91 of the Pakistan Army Act; and the absence of jurisdiction with the military court.

Burhanuddin
Burhanuddin, 31, was sentenced to death by a military court also for his alleged involvement in the attack on the funeral in Mardan in June 2013.

His father Umer Daraz Khan had challenged the judgement in PHC through his lawyer Ziaur Rehman Tajik.

Burhanuddin's family had claimed that he was mentally unfit and had been undergoing treatment before and throughout the duration of his custody.

Jannat Karim
Convict Jannat Karim of Hangu was sentenced to death by a military court in a terrorism case. His conviction was challenged in the PHC by his nephew Ehsanullah under Article 199.

Karim was charged with the preparation, facilitation and transportation of suicide bombers in 2009, 2010 and then in 2011, when an attack on a police convoy in Hangu left dozens of police officials martyred.

While allowing the writ petition, the PHC bench today overturned the death sentence and ordered Karim's release.

He was acquitted on the grounds of: absence of substantial evidence, except for a confessional statement that was recorded after a lapse of years following the convict's arrest; the trial being unfair; violation of Articles 4, 10-A, 12 and 25 of the Constitution as well as of Section 91 of the Pakistan Army Act; and the absence of jurisdiction with the military court.

Both Karim and Faraz were represented before the court by lawyer Shabir Hussain Gigyani.

Military courts
Military courts were disbanded on January 7, 2017, after the expiration of a sunset clause included in the legal provisions under which the tribunals were established.

However, on March 31, 2017 then president Mamnoon Hussain gave his formal assent to the Pakistan Army Act 2017 and the 23rd Constitutional Amendment Bill ─ the two pieces of legislation aimed at granting legal cover to military courts ─ after they were cleared by the parliament.

The courts were subsequently revived for two years and given legal cover from the day of their disbandment.
 
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Judiciary is Pakistan's most obsolete, corrupt and dysfunctional institution...These rotten eggs need to be taken care of by maarkhors the same as they treat TTP scumbags.


Remember When Former DG ISI Ahmed Shuja Pasha Told Senate Standing Committee We Caught 700 Terrorists But Courts Freed All Of Them.This Is Why Terrorism Was Rampant During That Time.

Then The Self Styled Champions Of Human Rights Question "Forced Disappearances" and "Mutilated Bodies".When Callous Judges Refuse To Protect The State The Agencies Will
 
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Remember When Former DG ISI Ahmed Shuja Pasha Told Senate Standing Committee We Caught 700 Terrorists But Courts Freed All Of Them.This Is Why Terrorism Was Rampant During That Time.

Then The Self Styled Champions Of Human Rights Question "Forced Disappearances" and "Mutilated Bodies".When Callous Judges Refuse To Protect The State The Agencies Will
Agar ya fehrist thori taweel ho jay tu koi muzaiqa nahin..
 
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wow, how many did actually NOT get released by these flawed courts?
I wonder how the judges would feel, if their loved ones died in any of these attacks?
There loved ones live in foreign lands..
 
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The court overturned their sentences after concluding that the charges against the accused had not been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.

We are in the middle of an ongoing existential war .. Military laws should be applicable to the exclusion of constitutional limitations otherwise there is no point in having Military Courts ... You can never prove "beyond a shadow of doubt" the guilt of culprits during wartime. These Courts are only helping terrorists and enemies of the State
 
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I hope these guys dont get released. Decision needs to b challenged in supreme court
 
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Updated October 18, 2018

5bc8a1370b16a.jpg

A file photo showing the Peshawar High Court's building.

The Peshawar High Court (PHC) on Thursday set aside the punishments awarded to 74 convicts by military courts in various cases of terrorism.

Accepting their appeals against the military courts' verdicts, a two-member bench comprising Chief Justice Waqar Ahmad Seth and Justice Lal Jan Khattak overturned the death and life sentences that were handed to the convicts.

The court overturned their sentences after concluding that the charges against the accused had not been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.

Though a short order, the bench ordered that the convicts be released. Nearly 50 of them had been sentenced to death, while the rest were serving jail terms.

The cases of three out of the 74 convicts whose sentences were overturned today are highlighted below:

Gul Faraz
Convict Gul Faraz of Dir was charged with the preparation, facilitation and transportation of a suicide bomber to a funeral site in Mardan where he blew himself up, killing dozens of people, including MPA Imran Mohmand, and leaving scores injured.

He was sentenced to death by a military court, a verdict that was challenged in the high court by his nephew Zrawar Khan under Article 199 of the Constitution, under which a high court may take up a matter when there is no other adequate remedy provided by law.

While allowing the writ petition, the two-member PHC bench overturned the death sentence and ordered Faraz's release.

He was acquitted on the grounds of: absence of substantial evidence, except for a confessional statement that was recorded after a lapse of years following the convict's arrest; the trial being unfair; violation of Articles 4, 10-A, 12 and 25 of the Constitution as well as of Section 91 of the Pakistan Army Act; and the absence of jurisdiction with the military court.

Burhanuddin
Burhanuddin, 31, was sentenced to death by a military court also for his alleged involvement in the attack on the funeral in Mardan in June 2013.

His father Umer Daraz Khan had challenged the judgement in PHC through his lawyer Ziaur Rehman Tajik.

Burhanuddin's family had claimed that he was mentally unfit and had been undergoing treatment before and throughout the duration of his custody.

Jannat Karim
Convict Jannat Karim of Hangu was sentenced to death by a military court in a terrorism case. His conviction was challenged in the PHC by his nephew Ehsanullah under Article 199.

Karim was charged with the preparation, facilitation and transportation of suicide bombers in 2009, 2010 and then in 2011, when an attack on a police convoy in Hangu left dozens of police officials martyred.

While allowing the writ petition, the PHC bench today overturned the death sentence and ordered Karim's release.

He was acquitted on the grounds of: absence of substantial evidence, except for a confessional statement that was recorded after a lapse of years following the convict's arrest; the trial being unfair; violation of Articles 4, 10-A, 12 and 25 of the Constitution as well as of Section 91 of the Pakistan Army Act; and the absence of jurisdiction with the military court.

Both Karim and Faraz were represented before the court by lawyer Shabir Hussain Gigyani.

Military courts
Military courts were disbanded on January 7, 2017, after the expiration of a sunset clause included in the legal provisions under which the tribunals were established.

However, on March 31, 2017 then president Mamnoon Hussain gave his formal assent to the Pakistan Army Act 2017 and the 23rd Constitutional Amendment Bill ─ the two pieces of legislation aimed at granting legal cover to military courts ─ after they were cleared by the parliament.

The courts were subsequently revived for two years and given legal cover from the day of their disbandment.
Now most corrupts will decide the fate of nation
 
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Military laws should be applicable to the exclusion of constitutional limitations otherwise there is no point in having Military Courts

That is what I was thinking .......... what was the purpose of Military courts then, if all this was to be decided under 199?

These same courts would hear and hear the maintainability of petitions under 199, if it was some tax payer involved. But would give benefit of doubt to arrested terrorists, like you are not only setting the culprits free, but you are doubting the intelligence network and demoralizing the people who take risks to capture these sleeping cells.
 
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