Lawyer turns tables on accusers, charging Muslim clerics with insulting religion.
LAHORE, Pakistan, June 30 (Compass Direct) – A Pakistani “blasphemy” suspect has appealed for asylum in Holland after facing police torture and attacks by Muslim extremists for his controversial religious views.
Yasaar Hameed, 36, applied for asylum in late March, meeting Dutch immigration officials for his first hearing on June 7. Still wanted on charges of blasphemy in
Hameed’s wife and two children remain in
A political activist and comparative religion scholar, Hameed has found himself in courtroom troubles several times since 1993, each time accused of blasphemy. The worst accusation came in December 2002, when extremist maulvis (Muslim teachers) accused him of publishing a pamphlet showing Muhammad, the prophet of Islam, in indecent positions.
Under Pakistani law, blasphemy against Muhammad carries the death penalty.
Hameed was detained for nearly six months from December 2002 to May 2003. The former prisoner said he was tortured for two weeks and denied food for a month, and that he also spent time in solitary confinement.
“After he didn’t come home for a week, we began to get worried,” Hameed’s wife, whose name has been withheld for security reasons, told Compass. “The police wanted a bribe before they would give us any information, and no lawyers were able to help us.”
Co-Defendant Murdered
Frustrated, Hameed’s wife and mother-in-law went to a local Catholic church to pray. The Muslim women felt that their prayers had been answered when they got a phone call the next day from a man who claimed to know Hameed’s location.
“It was through the tea server at the police station that my husband eventually got word to us that he was being held in the Koth Walee police station,” Hameed’s wife said.
Mushtaq Zafar – Hameed’s co-defendant in the 2002 blasphemy charge and a political colleague of his – was released on bail in February 2003. On his way home from the courthouse, Zafar was ambushed on the road and killed by “unknown assailants,” daily newspaper Dawn reported on






