Christian girl is being threatened by Islamist death squads in Pakistan for fleeing forced marriage

Christian girl, 14, is being threatened by Islamist death squads in Pakistan for fleeing forced marriage to Muslim man, 45 – as thousands sign petition to give her asylum

  • Catholic altar server Maira Shahbaz is hiding after being accused of apostasy  
  • Over 9,000 have signed petition asking PM to grant her and family asylum in UK 
  • As a backbench Tory MP, Boris Johnson led calls for Mrs Bibi to be given asylum
  • Maira has now appealed directly to PM, saying in statement: ‘Please protect me’ 

Campaigners are urging Boris Johnson to offer asylum to a 14-year-old Christian girl being hunted by Islamist death squads in Pakistan after fleeing her forced marriage to a Muslim man 30 years her senior.

Catholic altar server Maira Shahbaz, who was abducted at gunpoint and gang-raped before her wedding, is in hiding after being accused of apostasy for breaking off the marriage – an offence punishable by death in Islam.

More than 9,000 people have signed a petition asking the Prime Minister to grant the teenager and her family asylum in Britain to save her from ‘certain death’. Her supporters cite parallels with the case of Asia Bibi, a Pakistani Christian who was hounded by Islamic vigilantes on her release from prison after bogus blasphemy charges.

Hiding: Maira Shahbaz fears for her life. The 14-year-old is in hiding after being accused of apostasy for breaking off the marriage - an offence punishable by death in Islam

Hiding: Maira Shahbaz fears for her life. The 14-year-old is in hiding after being accused of apostasy for breaking off the marriage - an offence punishable by death in Islam

Hiding: Maira Shahbaz fears for her life. The 14-year-old is in hiding after being accused of apostasy for breaking off the marriage – an offence punishable by death in Islam

As a backbench Tory MP, Mr Johnson led calls for Mrs Bibi to be given asylum after she spent eight years on death row. She later fled to Canada.

Last night, Maira appealed directly to Mr Johnson. ‘I am very much scared due to threats to my life and my family. Please protect me,’ she said in a statement.

The schoolgirl fled her husband in August, five days after the Lahore high court ruled she had willingly converted to Islam and married Mohamad Nakash Tariq, a 45-year-old barber who lived near her family in the city of Faisalabad.

The ruling sparked protests in Pakistan where, according to human-rights groups, an estimated 1,000 Christian and Hindu girls are kidnapped each year and forced to convert to Islam.

Maira claims she was abducted on April 28 and held prisoner in a basement. She alleges that her captors drugged and raped her before forcing her to convert to Islam to marry Tariq. He denies her claims.

Sajid Christopher, a human-rights activist in Lahore who is supporting the teenager, said: ‘Maira is aware that if her abductor finds out where she is, she will be taken and killed. Dangerous men have been calling at their home and their neighbours’ homes trying to find out where the family are.’

As a backbench Tory MP, Boris Johnson (pictured on November 19) led calls for Mrs Bibi to be given asylum after she spent eight years on death row. She later fled to Canada

As a backbench Tory MP, Boris Johnson (pictured on November 19) led calls for Mrs Bibi to be given asylum after she spent eight years on death row. She later fled to Canada

As a backbench Tory MP, Boris Johnson (pictured on November 19) led calls for Mrs Bibi to be given asylum after she spent eight years on death row. She later fled to Canada

Catholic charity Aid To The Church In Need launched the asylum petition on its website. Its UK director, Neville Kyrke-Smith, said: ‘It’s urgent that the Prime Minister acts to save the lives of Maira and her family. They are in grave danger.’

Whitehall sources said concerns about the plight of girls in Pakistan had been raised last week by Foreign Office Minister Lord Ahmad during a meeting with Pakistan’s minister for human rights, Dr Shireen Mazari.

However, Home Office officials do not consider asylum claims lodged outside UK territory, instead advising those in need of protection to claim asylum in the first safe country they reach. Last night, a Government spokesman said: ‘Forcing women and girls into marriage is a serious abuse of human rights.’

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