27/07/2006
Briton's execution stayed for one month
A British man who is due to be executed in Pakistan has been granted a one-month stay of execution.
Mirza Hussain, 36, was due to be hanged on August 3, after being convicted of the killing of a taxi driver in Pakistan 18 years ago.
However, Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf, granted Hussain, who is from Leeds, a further stay of execution.
Hussain was convicted of the murder of the taxi driver in 1988, when he was 18 years old. However, the guilty verdict was rejected at Lahore High Court in 1996, following several trials. The court had ruled that there was flawed evidence in the case.
However, a week after the acquittal, it was declared that some of the alleged offences came within the jurisdiction of Islamic law and the case was referred to the Federal Shariat Court, which reserved the High Court's decision and sentenced him to death.
Hussain had denied murdering the taxi driver, claiming that he killed him in self defence. He claimed that the driver attempted to both physically and sexually assault him, before taking out a pistol. During a struggle, Hussain alleged that the pistol went off, shooting the driver who subsequently died from his wounds.
Hussain's family have been campaigning for his sentenced to be overturned and the campaign has been supported by both human rights and Muslim groups.
Fair Trials Abroad argued that, by the terms of the Pakistan Constitution, the High Court was the appropriate court to adjudicate appeals in criminal matters and it also guaranteed that no defendant could be tried twice for the same crime.
(KMcA/SP)
Mirza Hussain, 36, was due to be hanged on August 3, after being convicted of the killing of a taxi driver in Pakistan 18 years ago.
However, Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf, granted Hussain, who is from Leeds, a further stay of execution.
Hussain was convicted of the murder of the taxi driver in 1988, when he was 18 years old. However, the guilty verdict was rejected at Lahore High Court in 1996, following several trials. The court had ruled that there was flawed evidence in the case.
However, a week after the acquittal, it was declared that some of the alleged offences came within the jurisdiction of Islamic law and the case was referred to the Federal Shariat Court, which reserved the High Court's decision and sentenced him to death.
Hussain had denied murdering the taxi driver, claiming that he killed him in self defence. He claimed that the driver attempted to both physically and sexually assault him, before taking out a pistol. During a struggle, Hussain alleged that the pistol went off, shooting the driver who subsequently died from his wounds.
Hussain's family have been campaigning for his sentenced to be overturned and the campaign has been supported by both human rights and Muslim groups.
Fair Trials Abroad argued that, by the terms of the Pakistan Constitution, the High Court was the appropriate court to adjudicate appeals in criminal matters and it also guaranteed that no defendant could be tried twice for the same crime.
(KMcA/SP)
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A British man sentenced to death for murder in Pakistan has had his death sentence commuted to life imprisonment. Mirza Tahir Hussain, 36, from Leeds, West Yorkshire, was convicted of the murder of taxi driver Jamshed Khan in 1989. He had always denied murdering the taxi driver, claiming that he acted in self-defence.
Briton's death sentence commuted to life imprisonment
A British man sentenced to death for murder in Pakistan has had his death sentence commuted to life imprisonment. Mirza Tahir Hussain, 36, from Leeds, West Yorkshire, was convicted of the murder of taxi driver Jamshed Khan in 1989. He had always denied murdering the taxi driver, claiming that he acted in self-defence.
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Man remanded over 'bomb plot'
A man has appeared in court on Friday charged in connection with an alleged plot to blow up transatlantic flights. Umair Hussain, 24, from east London, has been charged with failing to disclose information. He was remanded in custody at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court until September 1.
Man remanded over 'bomb plot'
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British Terrorist 'Cyber Groomer' Jailed
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Taxi Driver Pleads Guilty To Murder Of Sian O'Callaghan
A taxi driver has pleaded guilty to the murder of Sian O'Callaghan who went missing after visiting a nightclub in Swindon in March last year. 48-year-old Christopher Halliwell, of Ashbury Avenue, sexually assaulted the 22-year-old office worker and stabbed her in the head and neck.
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Brothers' Sentences Overturned
Two brothers, jailed for causing brain damage to an intruder, have had their sentences overturned at the Court of Appeal. Munir Hussain, 53, was freed, after originally being handed down a 30 months jail term for grievous bodily harm with intent. The businessman hit Walid Salem with a cricket bat on 3 September 2008.
Brothers' Sentences Overturned
Two brothers, jailed for causing brain damage to an intruder, have had their sentences overturned at the Court of Appeal. Munir Hussain, 53, was freed, after originally being handed down a 30 months jail term for grievous bodily harm with intent. The businessman hit Walid Salem with a cricket bat on 3 September 2008.
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