This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/uk/8432948.stm
The article has changed 12 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 3 | Version 4 |
---|---|
Final pleas for death row Briton | Final pleas for death row Briton |
(20 minutes later) | |
The government has made a final appeal to China to halt the execution of a British man convicted of drug smuggling who is thought to be mentally ill. | |
Foreign Office minister Ivan Lewis said the execution would be "entirely inappropriate" after last-ditch talks with the Chinese ambassador in London. | |
Akmal Shaikh, of London, has reportedly been told by his family that he faces death at 1030 (0230 GMT) on Tuesday. | Akmal Shaikh, of London, has reportedly been told by his family that he faces death at 1030 (0230 GMT) on Tuesday. |
He denied the charges that led to him being found guilty of drug smuggling. | He denied the charges that led to him being found guilty of drug smuggling. |
The minister said: "The clock is ticking and a man's life is at stake as we speak. We hope that the relationship we have with China will count for something in the end. | |
Last chance | Last chance |
"It's entirely inappropriate that he be put to death, we've made 27 representations over the last two yearsÂ… and even at this late stage I hope they will see that in a modern world it is not appropriate to put a man with mental illness to death. | "It's entirely inappropriate that he be put to death, we've made 27 representations over the last two yearsÂ… and even at this late stage I hope they will see that in a modern world it is not appropriate to put a man with mental illness to death. |
"It cannot be right that there has not been any medical assessment done of Mr Shaikh's mental condition. In any judicial system that simply cannot be acceptable. | "It cannot be right that there has not been any medical assessment done of Mr Shaikh's mental condition. In any judicial system that simply cannot be acceptable. |
Mr Lewis added: "I believe this meeting tonight was the final opportunity for us to make the strength of our feeling known to the Chinese. I believe we have done everything we possibly can." | |
Mr Shaikh, 53, denied all knowledge of 4kg of heroin found on him in the north-western city of Urumqi in 2007. | Mr Shaikh, 53, denied all knowledge of 4kg of heroin found on him in the north-western city of Urumqi in 2007. |
His family say he is mentally ill. His daughter Leilla Hornsell told the BBC: "I don't think he will be able to really understand what's happening." | His family say he is mentally ill. His daughter Leilla Hornsell told the BBC: "I don't think he will be able to really understand what's happening." |
Ms Horsnell has said her father was approached by drug smugglers in Poland who convinced him they would make him a pop star in China. | Ms Horsnell has said her father was approached by drug smugglers in Poland who convinced him they would make him a pop star in China. |
The last-minute nature of this evidence is an example of why there must always be last-minute clemency Clive Stafford SmithDirector, Reprieve Executions shrouded in secrecy | |
She has spoken out about his mental health problems and his "erratic and extreme" behaviour. | She has spoken out about his mental health problems and his "erratic and extreme" behaviour. |
"I'd like to be hopeful, but time just seems to be running out," she said. | "I'd like to be hopeful, but time just seems to be running out," she said. |
"It's better for him to be in his own world rather than be faced with the reality of the situation." | "It's better for him to be in his own world rather than be faced with the reality of the situation." |
Mr Shaikh's cousins, Soohail and Nasir Shaikh, informed him of his fate as they spent an hour and a half with him on Monday at the secure hospital in Urumqi where he is being held. | Mr Shaikh's cousins, Soohail and Nasir Shaikh, informed him of his fate as they spent an hour and a half with him on Monday at the secure hospital in Urumqi where he is being held. |
Witness statements | |
Legal charity Reprieve has been working on the case with Mr Shaikh's family. | |
The organisation said the Foreign Office had done a "huge amount" in the case and had made 10 approaches to the Chinese government in the past six months. | |
The charity also released witness statements it said it had collected from people who knew Mr Shaikh while he was living homeless in Poland. | |
Reprieve's witnesses all say Mr Shaikh was clearly mentally ill when they knew him, and that he was fixated on recording a song that he believed would usher in world peace. | |
Reprieve's director, Clive Stafford Smith, said: "While it must be torture for Akmal going through this, the last-minute nature of this evidence is an example of why there must always be last-minute clemency." |