A Pakistani court has stayed the execution of a former policeman, convicted for killing his colleague, as it sought a report from jail authorities over his family’s claims that he is “mentally-ill”.
The district and sessions judge here had earlier issued death warrant for the convict, Khizar Hayat, for July 28.
However, the prisoner’s mother filed a stay application through Justice Project Pakistan (JPP), a non-government organisation working for prisoners’ rights, in the district court, which on Saturday stayed the hanging. JPP’s counsel Sara Belal had told the judge that the jail authorities in 2008 diagnosed that Hayat, 41, had been suffering from paranoid schizophrenia. Arguing that national and international laws did not permit hanging of insane persons, the lawyer requested the court to set aside death warrant and stop the execution of Hayat.
Hayat, who was a police constable, was arrested in 2001 for killing a fellow policeman. A trial court awarded him death sentence in 2003.
The Lahore HC division earlier decided the matter of Hayat’s mental health and allowed the execution after the jail officials told the court that at the time of filing mercy petition before the President, the medical examination of the condemned prisoner was conducted and he was found fit.