Sarabjit Singh,
an Indian national who was sentenced to death in 1991 on charges of espionage,
died from his injuries early on Thursday after he was attacked last week by
fellow inmates, according his lawyer and doctor.
Singh sustained
several injuries when six prisoners attacked him with bricks in Lahore’s Kot
Lakhpat jail on Friday. He was in a comatose state for 5 days till his death on
Thursday morning in Lahore’s Jinnah hospital.
Indian Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh said on his official Twitter page, “The criminals
responsible for the barbaric and murderous attack on Sarabjit Singh must be
brought to justice.”
He added that
the capital would make arrangements to bring his body home for funeral rites,
after a failed attempt to negotiate for the treatment of the convicted Indian
in India or a third country failed.
The Indian
government had initially appealed for Singh to be released on grounds of
treatment for the attack he received, as his injuries were grave and of great
concern to his government.
Singh was
sentenced to death for spying, as well as his role in the 1990 bomb attacks
that saw the deaths of 14 people.
While his
family had always insisted of his innocence, their mercy petitions were
rejected by the courts running during the regime of former President Pervez
Musharraf who is currently under house arrest and charged with conspiracy to
murder late former Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto.
Singh’s lawyer,
Owais Sheikh, said, “His death was already feared. His condition was more than
critical and he had less chances of survival.”
Sheikh had said
earlier, that his client had received threats following the execution of a
Kashmiri separatist, Mohammed Afzal Guru, who was hanged in February for his
role in the deadly attack on the Indian parliament in 2001, and the execution
of Mohammed Ajmal Qasab, the only surviving Pakistani in the 2008 Mumbai
attacks.
In a statement,
the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said, “The authorities have obviously
failed to do their elementary duty of providing him [Singh] safety and
security.”
The commission
has expressed their anger over the attack, describing it as a ‘dastardly act’,
and has tasked the government of Pakistan to leave no stone unturned in fishing
out the culprits for punishment.
No comments:
Post a Comment