Khurshid Ali Khan stepped out of the Rawalpindi central jail, in 2011, to resume a life he hoped to start afresh. After serving a sentence of 25 years, he was acquitted of the charges levelled against him and he came to Lahore. But luck was still not on his side. Eight years after completing his prison sentence for a case he was falsely implicated in, Khurshid still desperately struggles to build that life he dreamed of. Innocent or not, shedding the stigma of being an ex-convict has so far hampered all his efforts to get a decent job to make ends meet.
The case which landed Khurshid in prison became a high-profile one as, with the help of civil society, it brought under scrutiny Pakistan’s death penalty laws. But Khurshid’s name is rarely attached to the saga. It was his older brother Zulfiqar whose name was mentioned in headlines and op-eds.
On a fateful day in 1998, Khurshid — then around 19 years old — and his elder brother, Zulfiqar, 28, were attacked by two men while on their way to a village in the outskirts of Islamabad. Being a navy officer, Zulfiqar carried a gun, with which he shot at the robbers in self-defence. The brothers were arrested and both were charged with murder. Zulfiqar’s confession stated that only he had fired the gun and that his younger sibling was innocent. But corruption in the police and shortcomings in the justice system threw them both in Rawalpindi Central Jail.
For both Khurshid and Zulfiqar, life as they knew it was as good as over.
“Zulfiqar had confessed to the killing right after being arrested,” Khurshid tells Eos. “The investigation officer took a bribe from us, saying they’ll let me go, but he had got a higher bribe from the complainants for pinning us both for murders.”
“I was falsely charged with carrying a weapon when I’ve never even held a pistol in my life,” says Khurshid, now 40. (Khurshid did serve his complete sentence but various remissions allowed him to be freed in 13 years.)
After serving years in prison, even those eventually acquitted step back into a society unwilling to reintegrate them. Instead of enjoying freedom once again, they struggle to regain not just a source of income, but their integrity and self-respect
“We were both nominated in the FIR, but the court awarded Zulfiqar a death sentence upon his confession and sent me to jail for 25 years on the basis of testimonies that I had killed a man. It was all untrue because there was nobody to witness the incident except the four of us. My only crime was being there with my brother...”
Ejaz Shah was incarcerated for 15 years and four months in a murder case only to be released in 2016 when Supreme Court judge Justice Asif Saeed Khosa ruled that Shah had been implicated in a fabricated case and that there was no evidence to declare him the culprit. He too has struggled to fit back into society.
Shah’s father was a councillor-level political figure of Sahiwal in an area which was notorious for crimes and hardened criminals. In the early ‘90s, after his father won an election, his rivals all united against him in the next elections. A couple of years later, two local men, Chaudhry Rehmat and Abid from his opponents’ side, were murdered during a robbery. The culprit, a notorious criminal known as Kala, was sentenced to death. The sentence lingered, so one night in 2000, a grand panchayat (village council) was held to reconcile Rehmat’s family and his killer. The panchayat was being headed by Shah’s father and attended by MNAs and MPAs.
“Rehmat’s son, Inayat, who was a local drug peddler, sent his son Sultan to just fire at and injure Kala to create a diversion in the panchayat so that no compromise was reached and the killer was indeed hanged,” recalls Shah. “Sultan was a neighbour and a friend, so he and I were on our way when we encountered Aslam, who was related to Kala, gathering people for the panchayat. Sultan fired at Aslam to injure him, but he died on the spot. The murder case was filed against me, my father and younger brother on the complaint of none other than Sultan. Later, after investigations, my father and brother were absolved of the charges, while I was sentenced to death under Section 302.
The biggest responsibility for taking care of a human being lies with the state, and governments need to be congnisant of the fact that former prisoners come out of jail with psychological and emotional baggage, yet they deserve every opportunity and chance to become a respectable part of society again. As is the case with Khurshid and Shah to date, they struggle to find stable livelihoods and family lives alike.
A resident of Shakargarh, Khurshid had eight siblings, out of which one was murdered and one (Zulfiqar) hanged. His parents have passed away, and he himself is now destitute. “The day I was sent to jail, my life was finished. I was married and had a daughter right before I was sentenced — she’s studying these days. But I had to divorce my wife. My family has abandoned me because I’m jobless and I don’t even have a place to live. That’s how cruel our society is.”
Shah now lives with one of his brothers in Multan, while the rest of his siblings are scattered across Punjab. His family does not own a house and he cannot even return to their hometown Sahiwal for the fear that his opponents, who’ve grown stronger over the years, might murder him. “Currently, I work in a workshop and only earn a 25 per cent commission if and when there is work, there’s no fixed salary,” says Shah. “I’m over 45 and a former convict and in all those years in jail my body has also slowed down. Recently, my wife and I had a huge argument because I cannot provide basic necessities for my family.”
Khurshid’s brother Zulfiqar’s case was widely covered in the media; his execution was stayed around two dozen times before he was finally hanged in May 2015. During his time in prison, Zulfiqar taught some 400 fellow inmates, who received degrees (FA, BA, Masters) while in prison. He was eventually hanged in 2015. Khurshid, too, earned a BA degree and learned a few vocational skills during his imprisonment. He was released after he was acquitted of charges. “If I meet that investigation officer today,” says Khurshid, “and he swears on the Quran that he recovered a pistol from me, I’ll spend another 25 years in jail.”
In jail, besides learning how to weave carpets, Khurshid worked as a clerk and had firsthand experience of noting down the last wishes of death-row prisoners and witnessing the miserable conditions that they were kept in. “They’re trapped in a tiny cell with almost no facilities. It’s dark with nothing and no one around them. They’re only given a copy of the Quran to keep them busy. There’s hardly any water for the toilet and even the shalwar drawstring is seized so that they don’t hang themselves with it. What would a person be thinking when he knows he’d be dead in the morning? When he walks 20 steps to the gallows, I’m sure his whole life flashes in front of his eyes as he takes the final steps,” he says.
The day I was sent to jail, my life was finished,” says Khurshid. “I was married and had a daughter right before I was sentenced — she’s studying these days. But I had to divorce my wife. My family has abandoned me because I’m jobless and I don’t even have a place to live. That’s how cruel our society is.”
Lack of proper medical care often results in inmates’ deaths for which nobody is held responsible, Khurshid claims. “If someone has a heart attack, they’ll call a helper who’ll arrive after half an hour regardless of how urgently a prisoner needs medical care. He will walk a kilometre to get the lock-up keys, take the inmate to a hospital where doctors are usually absent. A doctor will be called in and by the time he/she finally arrives the person has usually died. A prisoner’s death in jail is akin to a dog in the street. No one is blamed or booked in any case.”
Basic amenities aren’t the only thing unavailable inside prisons, he says. Corruption holds sway in case of even minor tasks. “It all depends on how much money you can spend on bribes to get better facilities inside jails,” he says. “The more you spend, the more comfortable you’ll be. A prisoner who has been given rigorous imprisonment can avoid working by paying bribes. People sell drugs also. I once read in a newspaper that a simple superintendent of jail had built a massive house in Model Town when his salary wouldn’t be more than 50,000 rupees to 60,000 rupees a month. It became a huge scandal and he was suspended.”