Imtiaz Ahmad
mentalhealth
Islamabad : Pakistan’s Supreme Court has cited a judgement by its Indian counterpart to uphold the death sentence given to a mentally ill man suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, prompting an outcry from civil society activists.
A three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali issued the order in the case of Imdad Ali, aged around 50 years, who was sentenced to death for the murder of a religious teacher in 2002. His sentence was upheld by all superior courts, including the Supreme Court and the president rejected his mercy petition.
In an order issued on Thursday, the Supreme Court cited the judgment of India’s Supreme Court in the 1977 case of Amrit Bhushan Gupta vs the Union of India, which was similar to Ali’s case. The Indian convict’s mother filed a petition in the Delhi high court, which said her son’s execution should be withheld because he was of unsound mind and suffering from schizophrenia.
The Delhi high court and India’s Supreme Court dismissed the mother’s plea, arguing the convict did not suffer from legal insanity during his trial or at the time the offence was committed.
Pakistan’s Supreme Court said a psychiatric disorder such as schizophrenia does not subjugate a death sentence. It observed in its 11-page judgment: “In our opinion, rules relating to mental sickness are not subjugative to delay the execution of death sentence which has been awarded to the convict.”
The top court noted that subordinate courts had discarded Ali’s plea of mental illness. “Schizophrenia is not a permanent mental disorder; rather it is an imbalance which can increase or decrease depending on the level of stress,” it added.
The court further said, “In recent years, the prognosis has been improved with drugs, by vigorous psychological and social managements, and rehabilitation. It is, therefore, a recoverable disease, which in all the cases, does not fall with the definition of ‘mental disorder’ as defined in the Mental Health Ordinance, 2001.”
Ali’s wife Safia Bano had approached the Supreme Court, claiming her husband was insane and his death sentence should be delayed till he received medical treatment so that he could make his will.
The judgment was criticised by civil society activists, who said such a ruling went against all international norms of justice.
The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) protested against the judgement. A spokesperson said mental illness and insanity were reasons for a court not to declare a person guilty of a crime. “This decision will have far reaching implications,” HRCP said.
Earlier, the watchdog Justice Project Pakistan (JPP) too filed an appeal against the Lahore high court’s order which dismissed pleas that Ali could not be executed because of his mental illness. JPP argued that the court should look into Ali’s medical condition and the extenuating circumstances that had aggravated his mental illness during his lengthy time on death row.
Ali hails from Burewala district of Punjab province. After warrants were issued for his execution on July 26, his wife filed a writ petition in the Lahore high court, which rejected her plea on August 23.
She then approached the Supreme Court with the same plea but the three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice Jamali upheld the death sentence.

hindustantimes.com/world-news/pakistan-sc-cites-indian-ruling-to-uphold-death-sentence-for-mentally-ill-man/story-CYpBHMT6sA3xwJDCb5lEWO.html
mentalhealth