Pakistani christian, Asia Bibi, who has been on death row since 2010, for alleged blasphemy is at the centre of the high-profile case that has divided Pakistan and drawn prayers from the Vatican.
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Bibi - a mother, faces becoming the first person to be executed for blasphemy in Pakistan, as her family holds out hope the Supreme Court would free her but in any case say they feared for their future living in Pakistan under the blasphemy laws.
Bibi, who has been on death row since 2010, is at the centre of the high-profile case that has divided Pakistan and drawn prayers from the Vatican.
On Monday the Supreme Court heard her last appeal and said it had reached a judgement, which it has yet to reveal.
Bibi, a labourer, was accused of blasphemy against the Prophet Mohammed in 2009 by Muslim women she was working with in a field.
The charge is punishable by death under legislation that rights groups say is routinely abused to settle personal vendettas.
Her family said that if Bibi is released, it would be difficult to stay in her homeland.
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Bibi - a mother, faces becoming the first person to be executed for blasphemy in Pakistan, as her family holds out hope the Supreme Court would free her but in any case say they feared for their future living in Pakistan under the blasphemy laws.
Bibi, who has been on death row since 2010, is at the centre of the high-profile case that has divided Pakistan and drawn prayers from the Vatican.
On Monday the Supreme Court heard her last appeal and said it had reached a judgement, which it has yet to reveal.
"We are hopeful that whatever the court proceedings are it will come out as positive for us," her husband Ashiq Mesih said.Her daughter Eisham Ashiq added:
"I will be very happy the day my mother will be released. I will hug her and will cry meeting her and will thank God that he has got her released."Bibi's family are in London on a visit organised by Aid to the Church in Need, a charity which helps repressed and persecuted Christians.
Bibi, a labourer, was accused of blasphemy against the Prophet Mohammed in 2009 by Muslim women she was working with in a field.
The charge is punishable by death under legislation that rights groups say is routinely abused to settle personal vendettas.
Her family said that if Bibi is released, it would be difficult to stay in her homeland.
"Pakistan is ours: we were born there, raised there," Mesih said.
"The only tension we have is the blasphemy law. It is imposed on Christians. When it is imposed on us our (Muslim) brothers should think that the Christians never say anything bad about the Koran."Asia Bibi, after her release, can't stay there in the presence of this law.
"Living in Pakistan for us is very difficult. We don't go out of our home and if we go, we come out very carefully."Life in Pakistan "for us is very difficult".
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