Christian mother granted bail after 18 months in Pakistani jail over dubious blasphemy charges
A Pakistani court has finally set a Christian mother free after over a year behind bars on what looks increasingly like a politically charged smear campaign instead of a legitimate prosecution.
Stella Khawar, a 29-year-old mother of one, had been sitting in a Punjab jail since May 2024, arrested under Pakistan’s notorious blasphemy laws, only to be granted bail this month due to a complete lack of credible evidence and an unacceptably slow trial process, as The Christian Post reports.
Justice Asjad Javaid Ghural of the Lahore High Court approved Khawar’s release on November 6, citing the state’s apparent inability to do its homework—more than 18 months later, police never managed to produce a forensic evaluation of key CCTV footage they watched but never verified.
Weak Case, Long Detention Raise Questions
Khawar’s entire ordeal began in Kharota Syedan, a village in Pakistan’s Sialkot District, where she was picked up for allegedly scribbling blasphemous messages on currency notes—an accusation that supposedly stemmed from two unrelated incidents dated August 27, 2023, and January 7, 2024.
Authorities charged her under two sections of Pakistan's Penal Code, including the infamous Section 295-A, which criminalizes “outraging religious sentiment,” a charge that can land a person in prison for up to a decade, if convicted.
Section 505 was thrown in for good measure, accusing her of spreading fear and disrupting public peace—even though the only panic appears to be caused by politically motivated accusers and a sluggish justice system.
Dubious Witnesses and Missing Evidence
The name of the alleged “victim” was added to blasphemy case files not by the original police report, but in follow-up statements from a now-banned hardline group, Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), which has a track record of inciting unrest under the banner of religious purity.
The high court seemed unimpressed with the prosecution’s reliance on a single witness, Hafiz Syed Furqan Ijaz, who openly admitted that his accusations were based on personal suspicions rather than any firsthand knowledge.
“During the bail proceedings, the high court noted that the grainy footage failed to accurately identify the woman,” said Khawar’s attorney, Lazar Allah Rakha, adding that police were repeatedly told to submit a forensic analysis but didn’t bother.
Legal Advocacy Groups Step In
Coming from a Christian minority community and lacking the resources for top-tier representation, Khawar’s legal defense was supported by Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) International, a group known for stepping into such cases where justice is more a concept than a guarantee.
Rakha, who has represented several falsely accused individuals in similar cases, told reporters, “I’m very hopeful that we will be able to win her acquittal in both cases in the upcoming hearings, because it’s clearly a case of no evidence as noted by the high court.”
Still, because of safety concerns, the trial is being held behind the walls of Sialkot District Jail—an arrangement that says more about the threat posed by radicals than by the accused herself.
Systemic Abuse of Blasphemy Laws
The global human rights community has long taken note of how these allegations are used less for protecting faith and more as a weapon for social or economic gain, often against marginalized groups.
As Human Rights Watch observed in a June 2025 report, these blasphemy laws are systematically abused to “incite mob violence, displace vulnerable communities and seize their property with impunity.”
The same report, strikingly titled “A Conspiracy to Grab the Land,” outlined case after case where accusations were used to settle scores rather than defend sacred principles.
Government Promises Reform, but Action Lags
Federal Minister for Law and Human Rights Azam Nazeer Tarar announced in October that procedural changes are underway to limit the misuse of these laws, though what those changes are or how soon they’ll show up in the courtroom remains to be seen.
For families like Khawar’s, promises of reform are cold comfort after spending over a year separated while their daughter sat in jail pending basic paperwork the state couldn’t be bothered to produce.
Her family is now trying to come up with the 400,000 Pakistani rupees—roughly $1,400 in American money—to post bail in both cases, hoping to reunite with Stella this week.
The Bigger Picture: Rights and Accountability
Behind the legal jargon and procedural delays is a country wrestling with longstanding issues around the rule of law, religious tolerance, and state accountability.
Pakistan’s criminal justice system, as noted in numerous reports, routinely fails to protect the accused when religion enters the frame, often letting politically backed actors skate past consequences.
In a nation where mob pressure and fear of backlash can override legal fairness, securing something as basic as a forensic report begins to look like a luxury.





