Younes M. Shaikh is a qualified medical doctor who was arrested under,
Pakistani Blasphemy Law 295/C merely on the accusation of being an
Ahmadi and yet talking about
Islam and the Prophet of Islam, which the Ahmadis are not allowed to; although he was a born Muslim and not an Ahmadi only that he strongly felt that the Ahmadis were wrongfully persecuted, and so he wrote letters about this to authorities in Pakistan, the foreign embassies in
Islamabad; to members of the United Nations and to human rights organizations all over the world; he was a member of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, Islamabad. Dr. Younes M SHEIKH was born on 30 May 1952 in
Chishtian, Pakistan. He studied and qualified as a medical doctor in
Multan. In Dublin and London, he did post-graduate studies and worked as a trainee surgeon there from 1981 to 1988. After graduation as a doctor, he worked in Lahore, Pakistan for a few years. He also took membership of Human Rights organisations like
Amnesty International and SCCL, NCCL. On his return to Pakistan, he worked at
Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, practised as a general medical practitioner, then taught at Capital Medical College, G/9 Markaz Islamabad
Islamabad. Shaikh studied Journalism in his free time and attained a diploma in Journalism from Islamabad. He was active in intellectual, literary and social circles and he regularly attended the meetings of the Halqa Arbab i Zoaq in
Lahore and later in Rawalpindi and
Islamabad. He was an active member of the
Human Rights Commission of Pakistan in Islamabad. Shaikh attracted the attention of
Islamic fundamentalists because he had protested against the abuse of loudspeakers from mosques which caused pain and discomfort to babies, children, and his clinic patients. He often spoke out against extremist Islamic mullahs and their atrocities; particularly against one of his Ahmadi medical friends whose clinics and houses in
Burewala were burnt down. As a member of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, he wrote letters to President Musharraf and different newspapers about Islamic attacks on Ahmadis. He also campaigned for the human rights of women, of Hindus, Christians, and liberal, secular Muslims. He also spoke about 1971 civil war and crimes against Bengalis. He also expressed disquiet and exposed the horrors of the Pakistan Army atrocities in Bengal in 1971, and the role of Islamism, mosques, mullahs and Islamic fundamentalists belonging to Jamaat-e-Islami and its students wing Islami Jamiiat Tulaba, and Al-Shamas, Al-Badar the Islamic extremists in Bengal mass murders. In response rumors were spread against him to put doubt about his mental balance: as for example, that he might be the son of the female Prime Minister of Pakistan's enemy country, India; that he might be an apostate and Ahmadi and so worthy of punishment and death. Among other activities he founded an organization The Enlightenment active for literacy, an organization associated with the International Humanist and Ethical Union, in 1990. == Alleged blasphemy ==