THE
HIGH COURT OF SINDH AT KARACHI
Spl. Criminal
Anti-Terrorism Acquittal Appeal No. 151 of 2020
Present: Mr. Justice Naimatullah Phulpoto
Justice Ms. Sana Akram Minhas
‘[
Appellant : The State through Prosecutor
General Sindh through Mr. Ali Haider Saleem Addl. P.G
Respondent : Nemo
Date of Hearing : 05.12.2023
Date
of decision : 05.12.2023
JUDGMENT
NAIMATULLAH PHULPOTO, J.- The
State through Prosecutor General Sindh has filed this appeal against
respondent/accused Muhammad Ibrahim @ Lakhani. It appears that respondent/accused
was tried by learned Judge, Anti-Terrorism Court No.II, Karachi
in Special Case No. 456 of 2019. After regular trial, vide judgment dated 22.08.2020,
respondent/accused was acquitted.
2. Brief facts leading to the filing of
instant Acquittal Appeal are that on 10.07.2019 SIP Muhammad Tahir Khan along
with his subordinate staff was on patrolling; at about 1730 hours, he received
spy information that a person belonging to proscribed organization
Sipah-e-Sahaba is collecting donations/funds for the said organization, which
is to be used for another banned organization Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. Respondent was
apprehended and from his possession three funding receipt books were recovered.
Thereafter, mashirnama of arrest and recovery was prepared and respondent was
brought to P.S where FIR bearing Crime No.136/2019 for offences under Sections
11-H, 11-N read with Section 7 of ATA 1997 was registered at P.S CTD/STIG
Karachi against the respondent on behalf of state. After usual investigation,
challan was submitted against respondent/accused.
3. Trial Court framed charge against the
respondent/accused, to which he pleaded not guilty and claimed to be tried.
4. At trial, prosecution examined four witnesses.
Thereafter, prosecution side was closed.
5. Trial Court recorded statement of
respondent/accused under Section 342 Cr.P.C. Respondent/accused claimed his false
implication in the case. Respondent/accused did not examine himself on oath
under section 340(2) Cr.PC to disprove the prosecution allegations. However, he
examined DWs Huzaifa and Abdul Khaliq in his defence.
6. Trial Court after hearing learned
counsel for the parties and assessment of evidence vide judgment dated 22.08.2020
acquitted the respondent/accused, hence this acquittal appeal is filed.
7. The facts of the case in detail as well
as evidence produced before the Trial Court find an elaborate mention in the
judgment dated 22.08.2020 passed by the Trial Court and therefore, the same may
not be reproduced here so as to avoid duplication and unnecessary repetition.
8. Mr. Ali Haider Saleem Addl. P.G argued
that trial Court failed to appreciate the evidence according to settled
principles of law; that three funding receipt books were recovered from the
possession of the respondent and there was sufficient evidence against him
inpsite of that trial acquitted respondent on minor contradictions. He prayed
for allowing this acquittal appeal.
9.
We have carefully re-examined entire
evidence available on record with the assistance of Addl. P.G. It appears that
trial Court acquitted the respondent vide judgment dated 22.08.2020 mainly for
the following reasons:
“In
comparison to the evidence of prosecution it is noted that prosecution has
failed to produce trustworthy confidence inspiring and consistent evidence
against the accused person. The prosecution is suffering from material
discrepancies, contradiction, omissions and seems to have been fabricated to
prove their case. Therefore, I give benefit of doubt to the accused and answer
Points No. 1 & 2 as not proved.”
10. Trial Court observed the receipt books
produced before the trial Court were found new and fresh whereas, according to
the FIR the receipt books allegedly recovered from the respondent were used.
Even blue thela from which it was alleged that funding receipt books were
recovered, was not produced before the trial Court. Prosecution has also failed
to prove safe custody of the receipt books allegedly recovered from the
respondent at the police station. Trial court has rightly observed that there
were material contradictions in the evidence of prosecution witnesses. Addl.
P.G could not controvert those contradictions. Recovery of receipts and donation books have also not been proved by
cogent and confidence inspiring evidence. Private persons present around place
of arrest and recovery were also not examined. Police officials had also failed
to take photographs when search and seizure was made. Article 164 of the
Qanun-e-Shahadat Order 1984 specifically permits the use of any evidence that
may have become available because of modern devices or techniques and its
Article 165 overrides all other laws. Moreover, the scope of interference
in appeal against acquittal is narrow and limited because in an acquittal the presumption of innocence
is significantly added to the cardinal rule of criminal jurisprudence that an
accused shall be presumed to be innocent until proved guilty as held in the
case of The State v. Abdul Khaliq
and others (PLD 2011 Supreme Court 554), relevant portion is reproduced as under:
“From the ratio
of all the above pronouncements and those cited by the learned counsel for the
parties, it can be deduced that the scope of interference in appeal against
acquittal is most narrow and limited, because in an acquittal the presumption
of innocence is significantly added to the cardinal rule of criminal
jurisprudence, that an accused shall be presumed to be innocent until proved
guilty; in other words, the presumption of innocence is doubled. The
courts shall be very slow in
interfering with such an acquittal judgment, unless it is shown to be perverse,
passed in gross violation of law, suffering from the errors of grave misreading
or non-reading of the evidence; such judgments should not be lightly interfered
and heavy burden lies on the prosecution to rebut the presumption of innocence
which the accused has earned and attained on account of his acquittal. It has been
categorically held in a plethora of judgments that interference in a judgment
of acquittal is rare and the prosecution must show that there are glaring
errors of law and fact committed by the Court in arriving at the decision,
which would result into grave miscarriage of justice; the acquittal judgment is
perfunctory or wholly artificial or a shocking conclusion has been drawn.
Moreover, in number of dictums of this Court, it has been categorically laid
down that such judgment should not be interjected until the findings are
perverse, arbitrary, foolish, artificial, speculative and ridiculous. The Court
of appeal should not interfere
simply for the reason that on the re-appraisal of the evidence a different
conclusion could possibly be arrived at, the factual conclusions should not be
upset, except when palpably perverse, suffering from serious and material
factual infirmities. It is averred in The State v. Muhammad Sharif (1995 SCMR
635) and Muhammad Ijaz Ahmad v. Raja Fahim Afzal and 2 others (1998 SCMR 1281)
that the Supreme Court being the final forum would be chary and hesitant to
interfere in the findings of the Courts below. It is, therefore, expedient and
imperative that the above criteria and the guidelines should be followed in
deciding these appeals.”
11. The
impugned judgment passed by learned trial Court is neither perverse nor
speculative, but it is based upon sound reasons, which require no interference
by this court.
12. For the above stated reasons, there is no
merit in the appeal against acquittal. Finding of the innocence recorded
against the respondent/accused by the trial Court are based upon sound reasons
which require no interference at all. As such, instant Acquittal Appeal is
without merit and the same is dismissed.
J
U D G E
J U D G E