Former Pakistani police commando, Mumtaz Qadri, convicted in the killing of former Pakistan Punjab governor Salman Taseer, was hanged to death early on Monday morning at a Rawalpindi jail.
Qadri, deputed on the security of Taseer, had killed the governor at a market close to the latter’s house in Islamabad in 2011 for allegedly criticising the country’s controversial blasphemy laws. The self-confessed killer was arrested and handed the death sentence the same year by an anti-terrorism court. He was hanged at Adiala jail in Rawalpindi, the Dawn reported.
His appeal against the sentence was successively rejected by the Islamabad High Court and the Supreme Court last year. Radical religious groups had been demanding that Qadri should be forgiven as he killed a “blasphemer”. Taseer, who died aged 66, had termed the blasphemy regulations as “black laws”, drawing the ire of extremists. The laws were introduced by Pakistan’s military ruler Zia-ul-Haq in 1980s.
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