E/CN.4/2003/66
page 13
60.
On 11 June 2002, Mohammed Yousaf Ali, a 55-year-old Muslim cleric convicted of
blasphemy, was reportedly shot dead in the Kot Lakhpat Central Jail in Lahore by another
prisoner, allegedly a member of Sipah-e-Sahaba (SSP).
61.
Allegedly, Mr. Yousaf Ali’s murder is not an isolated case and fears have been expressed
that prisoners held on blasphemy and other religious charges could suffer the same fate. It has
been reported that, in 2001 alone, at least 40 Muslims, 23 Ahmadis, 10 Christians and 2 Hindus
were charged with blasphemy.
62.
On 7 April 2002, a Presbyterian church in Satrah village, near Gujranwala district, was
reportedly attacked by a group of Islamic extremists composed of seven youths aged between 14
and 25, armed with automatic weapons. Despite repeated requests from the Christian
community, the local police and the Senior Superintendent were allegedly reluctant to file a first
incident report.
63.
In 2002, Lahore High Court Justice Nasara Javeed Iqbal reportedly ruled that 14-year-old
Naira Nadia Masih, who was allegedly kidnapped, gang-raped by Muslim militants and forcibly
converted to Islam, had voluntarily married one of her aggressors, Maqsood Ahmed Shiekh,
despite concrete evidence proving that she was under age and therefore unable to marry or
convert to another faith without parental consent. At the initial hearing, the district judge had
reportedly nullified the marriage on the basis that, as a minor, the girl was unable to marry
without the consent of her parents.
64.
With regard to the communication concerning the attack carried out on 26 February 2002
in a Shi`ite mosque in Shah-Najam, Rawalpindi, during which 11 worshippers were killed
and 14 others seriously wounded (above-mentioned report, paragraph 47), the Government of
Pakistan sent the following reply to the Special Rapporteur on 7 October 2002: “The district
police has nabbed the culprits in this case and they are on judicial remand. The case is under
trial in the Anti-Terrorist Court No. 1 Rawalpindi and will be decided on completion of
formalities.”
Republic of Korea
65.
Conscientious objectors have allegedly been routinely sentenced by military courts to
three-year terms of imprisonment based on article 44 of the Military Penal Code and, more
recently, by civil courts under provisions of the Military Service Act. As of December 2001,
1,640 conscientious objectors, most of them Jehovah’s Witnesses and some of them members of
the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, are said to be serving their sentences in national prisons.
They are said not to be permitted any religious activity, allegedly because they objected to
military service on grounds of religious belief.
66.
By letter dated 20 June 2002, the Government replied, inter alia, that a compulsory
military service system was in accordance with its Constitution and relevant laws and that
persons who fail to discharge the duty of military service shall be subject to criminal
punishment. The Government considers the duty of national defence as constituting a valid
limitation on the exercise of fundamental rights such as the right to freedom of conscience and