Prison authorities in Pakistan on Friday
were preparing to hang convicted terrorists after the government lifted a
six-year moratorium on executions, officials said.
The decision followed the massacre of 135
school children and 12 others by Taliban gunmen at an army-run school in the
north-western city of Peshawar.
According to prison officials, at least 17
militants convicted in bombings and mass killings would be executed in jails in
Rawalpindi, Lahore and Faisalabad in the coming week,
Pakistan had adopted an undeclared
moratorium on carrying out death sentences from 2008 to win a trade deal with
the European Union. Since then only one hanging has taken place, of a soldier
convicted by court-martial.
The Trade Minister, Khurram Khan, said on
Wednesday that the decision to lift the ban would not endanger the deal with
the 28-nation bloc.
Army Chief, Raheel Sharif, a General,
signed death warrants for six militants, a military statement said late
Thursday.
The army chief’s signature is the go-ahead
for the execution of those sentences by military courts, the statement added..
The statement did not give the six names,
but an official told journalists that they included the ringleader of gunmen
who attacked the military headquarters in Rawalpindi city.
“His execution is expected on Saturday,”
said the official, who asked not to be named.
Prison officials in Central Punjab and
Southern Sindh provinces were also making arrangements to execute militants in
the next couple of days.
An estimated 8,000 prisoners are on death
row across Pakistan, according to the Interior Ministry, and nearly 30 per cent
on terrorism charges.
The military also stepped up the offensive
after the school attack, with fighter jets and ground troops killing scores of
militants in airstrikes and ambushes in Khyber tribal district near Peshawar,
officials said.
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