Accused says he wasn’t present during Mashal’s murder

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MARDAN: Sabir Mayar, one of the primary accused in the Mashal Khan lynching case, reportedly told the police he was not present when the incident took place last year.

Mashal was brutally beaten and shot dead at the Abdul Wali Khan University in Mardan over false allegations of blasphemy in April 2017.

Mayar, one of the two remaining absconders in the case, handed himself over to the police on Monday.

According to sources, Mayar told the police that he was not present when Mashal was murdered. He explained that he had remained in hiding for fear of police after being named as an accused in the case.

Moreover, the police produced Mayar before an anti-terrorism court (ATC) on today which approved his four-day physical remand.

Pakhtun Student Federation President Sabir Mayar is said to be the one who hatched the plan for Mashal’s murder at Abdul Wali Khan University in Mardan.

However, following Mashal’s murder, he along with two others, had run away.

Mohammad Arif Khan, a tehsil councillor from Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and one of the three absconders, was arrested earlier in March.

The punishment for the rest of the 57 accused who were arrested was announced by an ATC in Haripur on February 7.

According to the verdict, one person was awarded a death sentence, five were awarded life imprisonment, 25 were jailed for four years each and 26 were acquitted over the lack of evidence.

The 26 suspects released by the court received a ‘hero’s welcome’ in their native towns of Swabi and Mardan after their release.

Later, Mashal’s family challenged their acquittal as did the provincial government.

On February 27, the Peshawar High Court (PHC) ordered the release on bail of the 25 accused who had been awarded three to four-year sentences in the case.

The 25 accused had pleaded that there was a provision in the law under which those sentenced to less than five years in jail could be released on bail while their appeal was being heard.