RAWALPINDI: Mumtaz Qadri, an Elite Force commando convicted of killing former Punjab governor Salman Taseer, was executed at the Adiala Jail at around 4.30am on Monday, police said.
Qadri shot Taseer 28 times in broad daylight in Islamabad’s Kohsar Market on January 4, 2011. He was sentenced to death for assassinating Taseer on Oct 1 the same year.
Mumtaz Qadri, the killer of Salman Taseer.—Reuters/File
Qadri said he killed Taseer over what he called the politician's vocal opposition to blasphemy laws of the country.
His mercy appeal was rejected by President Mamnoon Hussain.
“I can confirm that Qadri was hanged in Adialia jail early Monday morning," senior local police official Sajjid Gondal told AFP.
A prison official confirmed the execution of Qadri.
Related: Qadri confesses killing Taseer, says he acted alone
Cries were heard from inside Qadri's house as hundreds of men and women gathered, and mosques could be heard broadcasting news of the execution, an AFP reporter there said.
“I have no regrets,” Qadri's brother Malik Abid told AFP, tears rolling down his cheeks.
He said the family had been called to the prison Sunday evening by officials who said Qadri was unwell.
But when they arrived, he greeted them with the news that authorities had deceived them, and that his execution was imminent.
“We started crying, but he hugged us,” Abid said.
Two weeks after Taseer was killed, the only Christian minister in the federal cabinet, Shahbaz Bhatti, was gunned down in Islamabad. He too was a critic of the blasphemy laws.
In August 2011, Taseer's son was kidnapped from his car in Lahore. Shahbaz Taseer’s wherabouts remain untraced.
Strict security measures were taken in wake of Qadri's execution.—DawnNews
Strict security measures were taken within the jail premises and a heavy contingent of Law Enforcement Agencies (LEA) personnel were deployed to avoid any untoward incident.
All routes leading to the Adiala Jail were sealed. LEAs personnel were also deployed across the city in view of agitation and protests.
The body of Mumtaz Qadri was handed over to his family members and was moved from the jail under tight security cover.
Qadri's last meeting with his family was arranged late on Sunday night.
Qadri's sentencing and appeals
An anti-terrorism court here sentenced Qadri to death on two counts for murder and terrorism in Oct, 2011.
In a 40-page statement submitted to the court, Qadri said at the time Taseer’s statements in support of Asia Bibi, a Christian woman charged with blasphemy, had provoked him to kill the governor.
Profile: Salman Taseer
The Supreme Court of Pakistan in October last year maintained the conviction of Mumtaz Qadri by an Anti Terrorism Court, overturning Islamabad High Court's (IHC) March 9 verdict, which had dismissed Qadri's appeal against his death sentence under the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) but accepted his plea to void the Anti Terrorism Act's (ATA) Section 7.
The government had approached the apex court for including the terrorism charges as a second offence in the punishment.
The court warned at the time that in Islam a false accusation can be as serious as the blasphemy itself, and that calls for blasphemy law reform “ought not to be mistaken as a call for doing away with that law”.
The Supreme Court dismissed Qadri's review petition against his death sentence in December last year, with the judge heading the bench observing that the petition could neither establish errors floating in the judgment nor blasphemy charges against the former governor.
The trial and appeals process in Taseer murder case lasted four years.
Governor Taseer’s killing was the most high-profile political assassination since former prime minister Benazir Bhutto was murdered in a gun-and-suicide attack on a Rawalpindi election rally in Dec 2007.
Reaction to hanging
Protests were recorded in most major towns of the country against Qadri's execution, with busy routes including the Islamabad Express Highway, Islamabad-Lahore Motorway (M- 2) and GT Road partially or fully blocked due to demonstrations.
Demonstrations were reported from several areas in twin cities.—DawnNews
Dozens of Rangers and police in riot gear as well as ambulances were stationed outside Qadri's home in Rawalpindi early Monday, an AFP reporter there said.
Metro bus service in Islamabad was also suspended as protestors occupied the bus track.
The Islamabad Bar Council made a strike call in protest against the hanging.
Traffic disruption due to protests was reported from some Karachi areas, with Malir 15 flyover, National Highway Karachi and Hub River road leading to Balochistan blocked.
Protesters torched tyres against Qadri's hanging in Hyderabad.
Shops and business centres were shut in a town in Nindo Shaher, a town in Sindh's Badin district on a call of different religious parties to lodge protest against Qadri's hanging. Strict security measures have been made in all towns of the district.
The proscribed Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamat (ASWJ) carried out a protest demonstration and chanted anti-government slogans in Muzaffarabad against Qadri's execution.
Meanwhile, as two journalists were travelling to Karachi's Malir area to cover a protest there, the protesters pulled the cameraman out of the car and beat him up. They also damaged the camera and the vehicle.
With additional reporting by Haseeb Bhatti, Abrar Haider, Malik Asad and Hanif Samoon.