The daughter of a British man sentenced to death in Pakistan for blasphemy delivered Prime Minister David Cameron a petition today demanding help in securing his release.
Mentally ill Mohammad Asghar, 70, was convicted in January for claiming to be a prophet of Islam, an act considered sacrilegious in Pakistan, which is 97 per cent Muslim. The verdict prompted Cameron to say he was "deeply concerned" about Asghar's fate.
Asghar was hospitalised last month after being shot and wounded in jail.
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"My father is extremely mentally ill; he suffers from paranoid schizophrenia, which was diagnosed by UK doctors in 2010. Shortly afterwards he travelled to Pakistan, where he was arrested on blasphemy charges," she said in the petition.
"His life remains at risk for as long as he is held in Pakistan. I have come to London today to ask the prime minister to intervene to bring dad back home," said the woman, who lives in Scotland's main city of Edinburgh.
Many in Pakistan are devout Muslims, and extremist currents are present in the country. Even unproven allegations of slights against Islam can provoke violent responses.
In 2012, a young Christian girl was forced to flee to Canada after being accused of blasphemy, even though the charges were eventually thrown out.
Asghar, a British-Pakistani with dual nationality who has lived in Britain for 40 years, was sentenced by a court in Rawalpindi, near the capital Islamabad, for writing letters claiming to be a prophet of Islam.
Kate Higham, an investigator at anti-death penalty campaigner group Reprieve, said Cameron should treat the case as an "absolute priority".