Pakistani convicted murderer takes top school score, wins scholarship
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[January 22, 2022]
By Syed Raza Hassan
KARACHI, Pakistan (Reuters) - A Pakistani
inmate serving a life sentence for murder in an overcrowded Karachi
prison has won a scholarship for further study after taking one of the
highest scores in the city's higher secondary school exams last year.
Syed Naeem Shah, 35, scored the highest in the general high school exams
among private candidates - that is, among non-traditional students -
last year in Pakistan's largest city, winning a scholarship for further
studies from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Pakistan (ICAP).
"What I have achieved while languishing in jail is not possible if one
does not have conviction," Shah told Reuters in an interview in Central
Prison Karachi, built by the British in 1899 in the port city in
southeastern Pakistan.
The prison, like many others in the country, is notorious for being
overcrowded, holding nearly 6,000 inmates in space meant for 2,400.
Pakistan prisons overall are at 130% of capacity and are poorly
ventilated, with insufficient beds and limited access to medicines, safe
water and bathing facilities, according to Amnesty International.
Speaking in a classroom inside the prison grounds, Shah said he enjoyed
school as a child but that his family could not afford to continue his
education. In jail, older inmates who were also taking classes motivated
him and helped him prepare for exams.
Shah is one of 1,200 inmates studying in Central Prison Karachi, but his
success is unparalleled, said Saeed Soomro, deputy superintendent of the
prison.
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Inmate Syed Naeem Shah, 35, who serves life term and has been
offered a scholarship by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of
Pakistan (ICAP) after he topped in intermediate exams, is pictured
outside his classroom in the Central Prison, Karachi, Pakistan
January 18, 2022. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro
“His results are (also) tantamount
to our success," Soomro said, in giving him the opportunity to study
and providing him with books and materials.
Shah was sentenced to life - 25 years in Pakistan - in 2018 for the
shooting and killing of another man in a personal disagreement in
2010. Years spent as a prisoner on trial, plus time off for academic
achievements, good behaviour and blood donations, leaves him with
about six years to serve.
Shah still has to pass an entrance exam to formally take up the
scholarship, an ICAP official said, requesting anonymity as he is
not authorised to talk to media.
The scholarships, of 1 million rupees or about $5,700, are offered
to students earning the top four scores in intermediate exams,
regardless of whether "they are in jail or outside", the ICAP
official said.
"I feel it will be very difficult for me to pursue this scholarship
from prison," Shah said, given the technical and specialised
subjects he will be pursuing.
Even before his exam success, Shah said he had filed an appeal
against his conviction that is pending in a high court in the
southern province of Sindh.
"I appeal to the president of Pakistan, prime minister and chief
executive of Sindh province to consider my case for remission."
(Reporting by Syed Raza Hassan; Editing by Tom Hogue)
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