KARACHI, Pakistan 鈥 Pakistan鈥檚 Supreme Court on Thursday ordered the release of an Islamist convicted of beheading American journalist Daniel Pearl, a decision that has left his family in 鈥渃omplete shock,鈥 lawyers said.
Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, who was the main suspect in the 2002 kidnapping and murder of the Wall Street Journal reporter, was acquitted by a panel of three judges.
鈥淏y a majority of two to one, they have acquitted all the accused persons and ordered their release,鈥 a provincial advocate general, Salman Talibuddin, told Reuters.
Pakistan鈥檚 attorney general said in a statement that authorities in Sindh, the southern Pakistani province where Pearl was abducted, would file a petition 鈥渁t the earliest鈥 asking the Supreme Court to review its decision.
Pearl, 38, was investigating Islamist militants in Karachi after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States when he was kidnapped. A video of his beheading emerged weeks later.
Sheikh and his co-accused are to be released immediately if they are not required in any other case, the head of the court panel, Justice Mushir Alam, said in a court order.
A high court last year commuted the death penalty of the British-born Sheikh into a life sentence and acquitted his three co-accused, citing lack of evidence.
The government and Pearl鈥檚 parents challenged that decision and pleaded to the Supreme Court to reinstate the death penalty.
The Supreme Court turned down both pleas on Thursday.
鈥淭he Pearl family is in complete shock by the decision,鈥 the family鈥檚 lawyer, Faisal Siddiqi, told Reuters. 鈥淣o amount of injustice will defeat our resolve to fight for justice for Daniel Pearl.鈥
Wall Street Journal editor-in-chief Matt Murray said the decision was 鈥渋nfuriating and unjust.鈥
The United States had said it may seek to try Sheikh if efforts to keep him in prison failed in what experts say could be a challenging factor in Pakistan鈥檚 relationship with the Washington. It comes as a new U.S. administration is reviewing Afghanistan鈥檚 peace process, in which Pakistan is a key player.
鈥淭his couldn鈥檛 have come at a worse time for Pakistan and U.S. relations because we have a new administration and the Pakistanis have been trying to establish contact with them 鈥 this is going to complicate the relationship,鈥 said Shuja Nawaz, a distinguished fellow at the South Asia Center at the Atlantic Council.
Experts said the case against Sheikh had been flawed from its early stages and the Supreme Court had likely made its decision on legal procedural issues.
鈥淲e have to contextualize it in the 鈥榳ar on terror phenomenon鈥 where many countries especially in South Asia and the Middle East 鈥 (were) not fulfilling rule of law principles or terrorists were not tackled via the criminal justice system,鈥 said Hassan Abbas, an international security professor at National Defense University in Washington and a former Pakistani police officer.
The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad declined to immediately comment. The media wing for Pakistan鈥檚 military did not immediately respond to request for comment. A Pakistan foreign ministry spokesman declined to comment during a press briefing, adding they were waiting to see the court鈥檚 detailed judgement.