A Pakistani trial court has acquitted a blind Christian man who spent 10 months in jail after being charged with blasphemy, an offense that carries a mandatory death sentence under the country’s laws.
The director of the UK-based Minority Concern Pakistan, Aftab Alexander Mughal, told Crux Now the acquittal is an encouraging development but warned that Pakistan’s blasphemy laws are still being abused to harass and threaten the innocent.
“Since the blasphemy laws were strengthened under the military rule of General Zia-ul-Haq in the 1980s,” Mughal said, “they have been widely misused to settle personal disputes and enmities.”
“Christians,” Mughal said, “have been disproportionately targeted under these laws.”
Authorities in Pakistan had charged 51-year-old Nadeem Masih – who has been blind since birth – under Section 295-C of Pakistan’s blasphemy law criminalising acts of insult to Muhammad, the founder of Islam, and mandates the death penalty upon conviction.
The court in Lahore ruled that prosecutors failed to provide sufficient evidence to support the allegations.
Masih’s family had consistently denied the allegation, insisting that the case stemmed from a dispute with local contractors.
Masih’s 80-year-old mother, Martha Yousaf, previously told Christian Daily International–Morning Star News that her son earned a modest income by operating a weighing scale for visitors at the park.
Yousaf alleged that several park workers routinely harassed her son, extorted money from him and borrowed funds without repaying them.
Masih’s mother said the contractor and several others prevented her son from setting up his weighing scale on the day of his arrest, assaulted him and took him to the police station where he was later accused of blasphemy.
She further alleged that Masih was beaten while in police custody and pressured to confess to an offense he did not commit.
Masih’s legal team highlighted major inconsistencies and weaknesses in the prosecution’s case, leading the court to acquit Masih.
Defense attorney Lazar Allah Rakha told AsiaNews the matter ought never to have got so far as formal charges and a trial – something Pakistan’s higher courts have said repeatedly – stressing the need for proper investigation in blasphemy cases to prevent abuse of law.
“These cases are extremely sensitive and carry life-altering consequences,” Rakha said. “It is essential that investigations are carried out carefully by experienced officers and that all available evidence is thoroughly examined before charges are filed.”
Mughal told Crux Now the trial court’s decision was “courageous” and “offers hope that victims of false blasphemy accusations may receive justice more swiftly, even at the initial stages of the legal process,” but said Pakistan has a long way to go.

Members of the Christian community chant slogans and hold placards during a protest in Karachi, Pakistan, Aug. 17, 2023, to condemn attacks on churches and houses in Jaranwala town in the Faisalabad district. A Muslim crowd vandalized churches and torched homes Aug. 16 after two Christians were accused of blasphemy. Anti-Christian violence in Sargodha May 25, 2024, was reminiscent of the Jaranwala attacks when a Muslim mob severely beat a Christian man, Nazir Masih, 72, who died June 3 in a Rawalpindi hospital. (OSV News photo/Akhtar Soomro, Reuters)