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U.K. urged to give asylum to Asia Bibi

Asia Bibi in an undated photo.

Asia Bibi in an undated photo.   | Photo Credit: HANDOUT

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Boris Johnson writes to government

Calls to the U.K. government to offer asylum to Asia Bibi, the Pakistani-Christian woman who was acquitted by Pakistan’s Supreme Court last month, have grown, as former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson wrote to the incumbent Sajid Javid, arguing Ms. Bibi had an “overwhelming claim for compassion” from the British government.

Rehman Chishti, the Prime Minister’s Trade Envoy to Pakistan since 2017, also told the BBC that the U.K. had a “moral obligation to give sanctuary” to someone who had been “persecuted for their faith but whose life is in grave danger”.

While Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said earlier this week that his government was in talks to grant asylum to Ms. Bibi, who was acquitted of blasphemy charges by the court after nearly eight years on death row, there has been growing pressure on the U.K. to also offer asylum.

Her lawyer, Saif ul-Malook, who has fled to the Netherlands following violent protests in Pakistan, told the BBC on Tuesday that she was yet to be offered a visa to any Western country, which remained the only impediment to her ability to leave Pakistan safely.

On the weekend, The Observer newspaper cited a video message from her husband, Ashiq Masih (which was not broadcast to avoid disclosure of their location), which called on the U.K., Canada and others to consider offering asylum to the family.

During a candle-light vigil in London earlier this week, Wilson Chowdhry of the British-Pakistani Christian Association warned that Britain appeared to be ignoring the plight of Ms. Bibi, which risked hitting its “vaunted and lauded position as a bastion for refuge for the oppressed”.

Status of discussions

The Home Office has officially declined to comment on any asylum application, while others have cautioned against leaping to conclusions on the status of discussions. “In my experience, decisions like this are incredibly complicated and in some cases depend on absolute secrecy. No sensible Minister would say anything in public,” said former Conservative Party leader and former Foreign Secretary William Hague.

Others warned of the danger of the debate being misused to fit into the narrative of the far right, and its anti-Muslim agenda. “It is disingenuous for the (far) right to suggest that she and her family are not coming here [because] it would offend British Muslims,” said Zubaida Haque, deputy director of the race equality think tank, the Runnymede Trust.

The Daily Telegraph newspaper, which also quoted Mr. Johnson’s letter to the Home Secretary, reported earlier this week that Britain had not offered asylum to Ms. Bibi and her family because of fears it would prompt “unrest” in the U.K. and attacks on British Embassies.

“There are unfounded media reports that Pakistani national Asia Bibi is being denied asylum into the U.K. because of concerns from British Muslims,” said the Muslim Council of Britain. “We find such insinuations to be as nonsensical as they are divisive. We see no reason why Asia Bibi should be denied asylum into the U.K.”

In his letter to the Home Secretary, Mr. Johnson also referenced the suggestion that there were concerns about security. “I am well aware, as a former Foreign Secretary, of the constant threat to our overseas missions, but we cannot allow the threat of violence to deter us from doing the right thing,” he wrote in the letter seen by The Daily Telegraph. “I do not think it is a dignified position for the U.K., given our historic links with Pakistan and the extent of our influence there, to look to others to do what we are allegedly nervous to do ourselves.”