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MIRZA
TAHIR HUSSAIN EXCLUSIVE ON BBC ASIAN NETWORK
(27 November 2006)
Mirza
Tahir Hussain, the Leeds man who was recently released after spending
18 years in a Pakistani prison, spoke exclusively to Sonial Deol
on BBC Asian Network this morning. Mirza, who only last week was
in a Pakistani jail under a death sentence and scheduled to be executed
at the end of the year, saw his sentence commuted by President Musharraf
after appeals by Prince Charles and other leading political leaders.
In
the studio with Sonia, Mirza told his side of the story in an in
depth interview to be broadcast in segments on Monday 27 November
on the Breakfast Show (6 - 9am) and later as a documentary for the
Asian Network Report at 6.30pm. Sonia Deol had previously met Mirza
Tahir Hussain in a gripping interview from his prison cell where
he pleaded for his life. Asian Network reporter Sanjiv Buttoo secured
both interviews as a result of deep interest in the case and a long
relationship with Mirza's family.
ABOUT
THE MIRZA TAHIR HUSSAIN CASE
Mirza
Tahir Hussain was tried and convicted of murdering taxi driver Jamshid
Khan while travelling to the village of Bhubar from Rawalpindi on
17 December 1988. The taxi driver reportedly stopped the car, produced
a gun and attempted to physically and sexually assault Mirza Tahir
Hussain who was 18 years old at the time. In the scuffle that followed,
the gun went off, and the taxi driver was fatally injured.
Asked
to describe the circumstances of his case, this is what he told
Sonia:
Mirza
Hussain: Well I took out my wallet and gave it to him, simple as
that, yeah. But he was not satisfied, you know. He said to me to
get out of the car and he also said, he ordered me, to get out of
the car, he's not done with me and he's going to, I mean molest
me and I should go behind the bushes and follow his orders or otherwise
he'll shoot me.
Sonia
Deol: So at this point you've got out of the taxi?
Mirza
Hussain: Yeah.
Sonia
Deol: And then he told you to go behind the bushes?
Mirza
Hussain: Yeah.
Sonia
Deol: And did you?
Mirza
Hussain: Yeah I had no other option, you know? I didn't want to
move you know but he was pointing the gun at me and signalling me
to move you know? So at a point when the gun was not aiming at me,
I went for the gun and grabbed his wrists you know and in that ensuing
scuffle the gun suddenly went off.
Sonia
Deol: Do you remember who pulled the trigger?
Mirza
Hussain: It was not in my hands, it was still in his hands so
during
that scuffle it just went off.
Sonia
Deol: Do you remember who pulled the trigger?
Mirza
Hussain: I mean
(pause)
the gun was still in his hand,
so I was trying, I mean trying to snatch for him so
it might
have
it's very difficult to say, I mean, it must have been,
I mean, some kind of pressure on the trigger or as I was also trying
to snatch the gun. The gun went off.
Sonia
Deol: Even though you've told me about what happened that led up
to this, did you feel guilty at all, at this point?
Mirza
Hussain: Guilty for what?
Sonia
Deol: Did you feel any guilt when you thought
.
Mirza
Hussain: Not at all, you know, I have done my duty you know, it
was a sudden incident and whatever happened you know, after all
we are human beings you know and when he got injured and fell to
the ground I felt duty bound to report this incident to the police
and get some help, you know, and take him to the hospital.
Sonia
Deol: Did you feel ANY guilt at all about how it was a scuffle that
led to him being shot and now he was dead?
Mirza
Hussain: I mean I had no other option in the same time you know,
I also had to defend myself as well instead of Jamshed Khan it might
have been me who might have got shot and killed.
Sonia
Deol: So at this point, really, you're just thinking about yourself
and what you've just had to go through.
Mirza
Hussain: Yes.
Sonia
Deol: Your thoughts are nowhere else.
Mirza
Hussain: Yes.
Mirza
Hussain: But after the gun went off and he fell to the ground, injured
state, then I mean, defending myself and all this, I forgot about
defending myself I just wanted to get help.
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