Mirza Tahir Hussain (born 1 June 1970) is a British man paroled on 17 November 2006 after spending 18 years on death row in Pakistan for the murder of a taxicab driver named Jamshed Khan in 1988, a crime which he says he committed in self-defence, as Khan pulled out a gun and tried to sexually assault him. In the ensuing struggle, the gun went off, fatally injuring Khan. Mirza was held in the Adiala jail in Rawalpindi. His representative is Greg Mulholland, MP for Leeds North West.
Conviction
His conviction was quashed by the Pakistani Supreme Court, but he was then found guilty by The Federal Sharia Court. He was due to be hanged on 1 June 2006.The execution was delayed multiple times from the initial June 2006 date. The first delay, from June to August, may have resulted from an effort to avoid an execution during a visit to Pakistan by Prince Charles. A second delay moved the scheduled date back to 1 September 2006. This would reportedly give Mr. Hussain's family time to negotiate blood money with the relatives of the victim, a practice under Islamic law. The next delay, to 1 October 2006 at 0500 BST, may have been related to the observation of the holy month of Ramadan.
Tahir Hussain (1938– 2 February 2010) was an Indian film producer and director known for his works in Hindi cinema.
Personal Life
Tahir Hussain is the younger brother of producer, director, and writer Nasir Hussain and the father of Bollywood actor Aamir Khan. Hussain directed his son, Aamir, for the first (and only) time in his directorial debut Tum Mere Ho in 1990.
He is related to Maulana Abul Kalam Azad. On 2 February 2010 he died in Mumbai following a severe heart attack.
At first he taught physics at Government College, Lahore, and after some time, proceeded to Oxford University and did PhD in Nuclear Physics in 1954. After his PhD, he came back to Pakistan where he joined Government College University. In 1954, he along with dr. R. M. Chaudhry founded the "Center For Advance Studies in Physics (CASP). In 1964, he was elevated as the Head of the Physics Department whereas, in 1965, he became a director of Center For Advance Studies in Physics (CASP).
Mirza (/ˈmɜːrzə/ or /mɪəˈzɑː/) is a historical title of Persian origin, denoting the rank of a high nobleman or Prince. It is usually defined in English as a royal or imperial Prince of the Blood.
The giant mouse lemurs (Mirza) are a genus of strepsirrhine primates. Two species have been formally described; the northern giant mouse lemur (Mirza zaza) and Coquerel's giant mouse lemur (Mirza coquereli). Like all other lemurs, they are native to Madagascar, where they are found in the western dry deciduous forests and further to the north in the Sambirano valley and Sahamalaza Peninsula. First described in 1867 as a single species, they were grouped with mouse lemurs and dwarf lemurs. In 1870, British zoologist John Edward Gray assigned them to their own genus, Mirza. The classification was not widely accepted until the 1990s, which followed the revival of the genus by American paleoanthropologist Ian Tattersall in 1982. In 2005, the northern population was declared a new species, and in 2010, the World Wide Fund for Nature announced that a southwestern population might also be a new species.
Giant mouse lemurs are about three times larger than mouse lemurs, weighing approximately 300g (11oz), and have a long, bushy tail. They are most closely related to mouse lemurs within Cheirogaleidae, a family of small, nocturnal lemurs. Giant mouse lemurs sleep in nests during the day and forage alone at night for fruit, tree gum, insects, and small vertebrates. Unlike many other cheirogaleids, they do not enter a state of torpor during the dry season. The northern species is generally more social than the southern species, particularly when nesting, though males and females may form pair bonds. The northern species also has the largest testicle size relative to its body size among all primates and is atypical among lemurs for breeding year-round instead of seasonally. Home ranges often overlap, with related females living closely together while males disperse. Giant mouse lemurs are vocal, although they also scent mark using saliva, urine, and secretions from the anogenital scent gland.
Saba Zaman reports on efforts to free Mirza Tahir Hussain who is on death row in Pakistan
published: 14 Aug 2008
Secondary Citizenship - Letters to Death Row
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published: 29 Jul 2013
Presser following release of Mirza Tahir Hussain from Pakistani jail after 18 years
(18 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
No Access UK
1. Mirza Tahir Hussain (with beard) and his brother Amjad getting out of a vehicle
2. Mirza Tahir Hussain and Amjad walking into news conference
3. Mirza and Amjad sitting together
4. Mirza and Amjad hugging and posing for photographers
5. Mirza and Sajjad Haider Karim (in black suit), a European Parliament member (from northwest England) who campaigned for his release, talking before news conference
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sajjad Haider Karim, European Parliament member (from northwest England) who campaigned for Mirza Hussain's release: (speaking on Mirza's behalf)
"I thank God for reuniting me with my family today. I extend my thanks to (Pakistani) President (Pervez) Musharraf for the courage and leadership he has shown in granting my release....
published: 23 Jul 2015
Victim's family and lawyer react to release of Briton accused of murder
(17 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
++AUDIO QUALITY AS INCOMING++
1. Wide of exterior of Adyala jail
2. Close up of security picket
3. Wide of family of dead taxi driver, Jamshad Khan
4. Mid of Khan's father
5. STILL of Jamshad Khan
6. Wide of Khan's holding STILL of him
7. SOUNDBITE (Urdu): Sohbat Khan, uncle of the driver
"So this news was very shocking for us, very shocking, which made us sad. Although we were waiting for justice but our rulers, just to please their foreign rulers,Tony Blair, Prince Charles and the people belonging to the European Union and other organisations, they have added to our injuries."
8. Wide of Khan's family
9. Set up of driver's lawyer
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Rab Nawaz Noon, lawyer of the driver:
"Five judges of the Supreme Court of Afghanistan have una...
published: 23 Jul 2015
Mirza Tahir Hussain || Finance sec.PTI District Gilgit Interview to Kumail Tv..
published: 28 Jul 2020
Tahir Hussain Gayawi Bayan[Maulana Attaullah Shah Bukhari V/S Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadyani
Tahir Hussain Gayawi Bayan[
Maulana Attaullah Shah Bukhari
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Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadyani
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published: 12 Nov 2019
Ahmadiyya Caliph Mirza Tahir Ahmad on Muslim leaders Pervez Musharraf
http://www.rabwah.net
published: 02 Mar 2015
Qadiyani Sarbarah Mirza Tahir London Farar Kaisay Howa ? | #ktvofficial #viewsonline #hasanrana
#ktvofficial #viewsonline #hasanrana
Qadiyani Sarbarah Mirza Tahir London Farar Kaisay Howa ?
قادیانی سربراہ مرزا طاہر لندن فرار کیسے ہوا ؟
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published: 07 Aug 2023
Hazrat Mirza Tahir Ahmad Khalifatul Masih IV's point of view regarding Imran Khan
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(18 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
No Access UK
1. Mirza Tahir Hussain (with beard) and his brother Amjad getting out of a vehicle
2. Mirza Tahir Hussain and Amjad walki...
(18 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
No Access UK
1. Mirza Tahir Hussain (with beard) and his brother Amjad getting out of a vehicle
2. Mirza Tahir Hussain and Amjad walking into news conference
3. Mirza and Amjad sitting together
4. Mirza and Amjad hugging and posing for photographers
5. Mirza and Sajjad Haider Karim (in black suit), a European Parliament member (from northwest England) who campaigned for his release, talking before news conference
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sajjad Haider Karim, European Parliament member (from northwest England) who campaigned for Mirza Hussain's release: (speaking on Mirza's behalf)
"I thank God for reuniting me with my family today. I extend my thanks to (Pakistani) President (Pervez) Musharraf for the courage and leadership he has shown in granting my release. I am also grateful to His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales, Prime Minister Tony Blair, Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett, and Doctor (Josep) Borrell, President of the European Parliament."
7. Close-up of Mirza smiling
8. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sajjad Haider Karim, a European Parliament member from northwest England who campaigned for Mirza release (Karim was speaking on Mirza's behalf):
"It has been a tremendous strain to be separated from my family and loved ones. I thank God for giving me the faith and strength to persevere. Freedom is a great gift. I want to use this freedom to get to know my family again, to adjust back to living here and to come to terms with my ordeal. I ask the media now to give me the peace and space to do this. Thanks again for your support and to my friends for their help. My thoughts remain with all the prisoners I have left behind."
9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Mirza Tahir Hussain, freed prisoner:
"I'm glad to be back home again, thank you much."
10. Mirza Hussain and his brother leaving news conference
STORYLINE
A British man on Pakistan's death row for 18 years returned home on Friday following an act of clemency by President General Pervez Musharraf.
A grey-bearded and weary Mirza Tahir Hussain, 36, emerged from a British Airways plane at Heathrow Airport just hours after being freed from prison and flown out of Pakistan to be greeted by his brother, Amjad.
Hussain said, in a prepared statement read by one of his most ardent supporters, European Parliament member Sajjad Haider Karim, that it had been a tremendous strain being away from his family for so long.
"Freedom is a great gift. I want to use this freedom to get to know my family again and to adjust back to living here and to come to terms with my ordeal," said Karim on Hussain's behalf.
In his speech he also mentioned the prisoners he left behind and Hussain said his thoughts were with them
He also paid tribute and specific thanks to Musharraf, Prince Charles and British Prime Minister Tony Blair for their support.
Hussain, who faced death by hanging after being convicted of murdering a taxi driver in 1988, had always maintained he was defending himself from an armed sexual assault when Jamshed Khan was shot to death.
Musharraf gave an order on Wednesday that Hussain's death sentence should be commuted to a life sentence.
Under Pakistan's sentencing rules, a life sentence is actually equivalent to 14 years, which means Hussain has served his time, an official from the president's office said on condition of anonymity because of prohibitions on speaking to the media.
Hussain was being held at the high-security Adiala prison in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.
On the day he arrived, Hussain was picked up by the taxi driver, Khan, who the Briton claimed pulled out a gun and tried to sexually assault him.
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(18 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
No Access UK
1. Mirza Tahir Hussain (with beard) and his brother Amjad getting out of a vehicle
2. Mirza Tahir Hussain and Amjad walking into news conference
3. Mirza and Amjad sitting together
4. Mirza and Amjad hugging and posing for photographers
5. Mirza and Sajjad Haider Karim (in black suit), a European Parliament member (from northwest England) who campaigned for his release, talking before news conference
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sajjad Haider Karim, European Parliament member (from northwest England) who campaigned for Mirza Hussain's release: (speaking on Mirza's behalf)
"I thank God for reuniting me with my family today. I extend my thanks to (Pakistani) President (Pervez) Musharraf for the courage and leadership he has shown in granting my release. I am also grateful to His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales, Prime Minister Tony Blair, Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett, and Doctor (Josep) Borrell, President of the European Parliament."
7. Close-up of Mirza smiling
8. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sajjad Haider Karim, a European Parliament member from northwest England who campaigned for Mirza release (Karim was speaking on Mirza's behalf):
"It has been a tremendous strain to be separated from my family and loved ones. I thank God for giving me the faith and strength to persevere. Freedom is a great gift. I want to use this freedom to get to know my family again, to adjust back to living here and to come to terms with my ordeal. I ask the media now to give me the peace and space to do this. Thanks again for your support and to my friends for their help. My thoughts remain with all the prisoners I have left behind."
9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Mirza Tahir Hussain, freed prisoner:
"I'm glad to be back home again, thank you much."
10. Mirza Hussain and his brother leaving news conference
STORYLINE
A British man on Pakistan's death row for 18 years returned home on Friday following an act of clemency by President General Pervez Musharraf.
A grey-bearded and weary Mirza Tahir Hussain, 36, emerged from a British Airways plane at Heathrow Airport just hours after being freed from prison and flown out of Pakistan to be greeted by his brother, Amjad.
Hussain said, in a prepared statement read by one of his most ardent supporters, European Parliament member Sajjad Haider Karim, that it had been a tremendous strain being away from his family for so long.
"Freedom is a great gift. I want to use this freedom to get to know my family again and to adjust back to living here and to come to terms with my ordeal," said Karim on Hussain's behalf.
In his speech he also mentioned the prisoners he left behind and Hussain said his thoughts were with them
He also paid tribute and specific thanks to Musharraf, Prince Charles and British Prime Minister Tony Blair for their support.
Hussain, who faced death by hanging after being convicted of murdering a taxi driver in 1988, had always maintained he was defending himself from an armed sexual assault when Jamshed Khan was shot to death.
Musharraf gave an order on Wednesday that Hussain's death sentence should be commuted to a life sentence.
Under Pakistan's sentencing rules, a life sentence is actually equivalent to 14 years, which means Hussain has served his time, an official from the president's office said on condition of anonymity because of prohibitions on speaking to the media.
Hussain was being held at the high-security Adiala prison in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.
On the day he arrived, Hussain was picked up by the taxi driver, Khan, who the Briton claimed pulled out a gun and tried to sexually assault him.
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(17 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
++AUDIO QUALITY AS INCOMING++
1. Wide of exterior of Adyala jail
2. Close up of security picket
3. Wide of family of dead taxi driv...
(17 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
++AUDIO QUALITY AS INCOMING++
1. Wide of exterior of Adyala jail
2. Close up of security picket
3. Wide of family of dead taxi driver, Jamshad Khan
4. Mid of Khan's father
5. STILL of Jamshad Khan
6. Wide of Khan's holding STILL of him
7. SOUNDBITE (Urdu): Sohbat Khan, uncle of the driver
"So this news was very shocking for us, very shocking, which made us sad. Although we were waiting for justice but our rulers, just to please their foreign rulers,Tony Blair, Prince Charles and the people belonging to the European Union and other organisations, they have added to our injuries."
8. Wide of Khan's family
9. Set up of driver's lawyer
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Rab Nawaz Noon, lawyer of the driver:
"Five judges of the Supreme Court of Afghanistan have unanimously rejected the appeal of Mirza Tahir Hussain and his (inaudible) too was rejected, and then (inaudible) too was rejected by the President and I believe there is no (inaudible) for the President once again grant his clemency and all these things we've seen in the press, Tony Blair, Prince Charles and people of the Europe Union are pressurising the president and the president would have repelled this pressure and would have upheld the rule of law but unfortunately things are the other way round."
11. Wide of Noon
STORYLINE
A British man on death row for 18 years in Pakistan was freed on Friday morning, two days after President General Pervez Musharraf granted him clemency, officials said.
Mirza Tahir Hussain, who has maintained his innocence for killing a taxi driver, Jamshad Khan, was freed ahead of a weekend visit by British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
However the Khan's family expressed shock at the decision.
"We were waiting for justice but our rulers, just to please their foreign rulers,Tony Blair, Prince Charles and the people belonging to the European Union and other organisations, they have added to our injuries," said Sohbat Khan.
Khan's lawyer, Rab Nawaz Noon, also claimed that foreign pressure led to Hussain's release.
Musharraf gave an order on Wednesday that Hussain's death sentence should be commuted to a life sentence.
Under Pakistan's sentencing rules, a life sentence is actually equivalent to 14 years, which means Hussain has served his time, an official from the president's office said on condition of anonymity because of prohibitions on speaking to the media.
Hussain was being held at the high-security Adiala prison in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.
His whereabouts were not immediately known on Friday, but British High Commission officials have been closely following his case and pushing for his release.
Diplomats were not immediately available for comment.
Hussain was 18 in 1988 when he travelled to his ancestral home of Pakistan for the first time to visit relatives in the Punjab province town of Chakwal.
On the day he arrived, Hussain was picked up by the taxi driver, Khan, who the Briton claimed pulled out a gun and tried to sexually assault him. During a struggle, the driver was fatally shot. Hussain drove the cab and the body to a police station, where he was arrested.
Hussain was convicted and sentenced to death in 1989 for murder, then acquitted in 1996 by a higher court.
However, an Islamic court overturned the acquittal and convicted him of armed robbery, sentencing him to death in 1998 - a penalty that under Islamic law must be carried out unless the victim's family decides to pardon him.
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(17 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
++AUDIO QUALITY AS INCOMING++
1. Wide of exterior of Adyala jail
2. Close up of security picket
3. Wide of family of dead taxi driver, Jamshad Khan
4. Mid of Khan's father
5. STILL of Jamshad Khan
6. Wide of Khan's holding STILL of him
7. SOUNDBITE (Urdu): Sohbat Khan, uncle of the driver
"So this news was very shocking for us, very shocking, which made us sad. Although we were waiting for justice but our rulers, just to please their foreign rulers,Tony Blair, Prince Charles and the people belonging to the European Union and other organisations, they have added to our injuries."
8. Wide of Khan's family
9. Set up of driver's lawyer
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Rab Nawaz Noon, lawyer of the driver:
"Five judges of the Supreme Court of Afghanistan have unanimously rejected the appeal of Mirza Tahir Hussain and his (inaudible) too was rejected, and then (inaudible) too was rejected by the President and I believe there is no (inaudible) for the President once again grant his clemency and all these things we've seen in the press, Tony Blair, Prince Charles and people of the Europe Union are pressurising the president and the president would have repelled this pressure and would have upheld the rule of law but unfortunately things are the other way round."
11. Wide of Noon
STORYLINE
A British man on death row for 18 years in Pakistan was freed on Friday morning, two days after President General Pervez Musharraf granted him clemency, officials said.
Mirza Tahir Hussain, who has maintained his innocence for killing a taxi driver, Jamshad Khan, was freed ahead of a weekend visit by British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
However the Khan's family expressed shock at the decision.
"We were waiting for justice but our rulers, just to please their foreign rulers,Tony Blair, Prince Charles and the people belonging to the European Union and other organisations, they have added to our injuries," said Sohbat Khan.
Khan's lawyer, Rab Nawaz Noon, also claimed that foreign pressure led to Hussain's release.
Musharraf gave an order on Wednesday that Hussain's death sentence should be commuted to a life sentence.
Under Pakistan's sentencing rules, a life sentence is actually equivalent to 14 years, which means Hussain has served his time, an official from the president's office said on condition of anonymity because of prohibitions on speaking to the media.
Hussain was being held at the high-security Adiala prison in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.
His whereabouts were not immediately known on Friday, but British High Commission officials have been closely following his case and pushing for his release.
Diplomats were not immediately available for comment.
Hussain was 18 in 1988 when he travelled to his ancestral home of Pakistan for the first time to visit relatives in the Punjab province town of Chakwal.
On the day he arrived, Hussain was picked up by the taxi driver, Khan, who the Briton claimed pulled out a gun and tried to sexually assault him. During a struggle, the driver was fatally shot. Hussain drove the cab and the body to a police station, where he was arrested.
Hussain was convicted and sentenced to death in 1989 for murder, then acquitted in 1996 by a higher court.
However, an Islamic court overturned the acquittal and convicted him of armed robbery, sentencing him to death in 1998 - a penalty that under Islamic law must be carried out unless the victim's family decides to pardon him.
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
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You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/bde174e133a0793599e1f82c9d2740b0
Tahir Hussain Gayawi Bayan[
Maulana Attaullah Shah Bukhari
V/S
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadyani
Subscribe now YouTube channel.
As Mushaira ...
Tahir Hussain Gayawi Bayan[
Maulana Attaullah Shah Bukhari
V/S
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadyani
Subscribe now YouTube channel.
As Mushaira Media
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh9ocZXaN001bu_ftxfZ2oA
----------------------------------------------
Video Recorder and Uploaded by As Mushaira Media
Aaquib Siddiqui Narauchh
-------------------------------------------
Flow the Fecbook Page. As Mushaira Media
https://www.facebook.com/As-Mushaira-Media-119403776113069/
---------------------------------------------
Agar Aapko Video acchcha Lage to like comment share jarur kare.
----------------------------------------------
Best HD Quality video is Uploaded on your Channel
--------------------------------------------
Aaquib Siddiqui contact no 9137012913
#asmushaira
#naat
#gazal
Tahir Hussain Gayawi Bayan[
Maulana Attaullah Shah Bukhari
V/S
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadyani
Subscribe now YouTube channel.
As Mushaira Media
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh9ocZXaN001bu_ftxfZ2oA
----------------------------------------------
Video Recorder and Uploaded by As Mushaira Media
Aaquib Siddiqui Narauchh
-------------------------------------------
Flow the Fecbook Page. As Mushaira Media
https://www.facebook.com/As-Mushaira-Media-119403776113069/
---------------------------------------------
Agar Aapko Video acchcha Lage to like comment share jarur kare.
----------------------------------------------
Best HD Quality video is Uploaded on your Channel
--------------------------------------------
Aaquib Siddiqui contact no 9137012913
#asmushaira
#naat
#gazal
Atomic Academia - The last years hottest research! 🚀 It's like Lady Whistledown's Society Papers but for Research. 🔥
Like, share, subscribe & follow:
https://www.instagram.com/atomicacademia/
https://www.twitter.com/atomicacademia/
The Annual Journal: https://doi.org/10.62594/ATOM5000
Preprint Server: https://doi.org/10.62594/MFXW3920
#Research for #phd, #phdlife, #postdoc, #postdoclife.
(18 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
No Access UK
1. Mirza Tahir Hussain (with beard) and his brother Amjad getting out of a vehicle
2. Mirza Tahir Hussain and Amjad walking into news conference
3. Mirza and Amjad sitting together
4. Mirza and Amjad hugging and posing for photographers
5. Mirza and Sajjad Haider Karim (in black suit), a European Parliament member (from northwest England) who campaigned for his release, talking before news conference
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sajjad Haider Karim, European Parliament member (from northwest England) who campaigned for Mirza Hussain's release: (speaking on Mirza's behalf)
"I thank God for reuniting me with my family today. I extend my thanks to (Pakistani) President (Pervez) Musharraf for the courage and leadership he has shown in granting my release. I am also grateful to His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales, Prime Minister Tony Blair, Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett, and Doctor (Josep) Borrell, President of the European Parliament."
7. Close-up of Mirza smiling
8. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sajjad Haider Karim, a European Parliament member from northwest England who campaigned for Mirza release (Karim was speaking on Mirza's behalf):
"It has been a tremendous strain to be separated from my family and loved ones. I thank God for giving me the faith and strength to persevere. Freedom is a great gift. I want to use this freedom to get to know my family again, to adjust back to living here and to come to terms with my ordeal. I ask the media now to give me the peace and space to do this. Thanks again for your support and to my friends for their help. My thoughts remain with all the prisoners I have left behind."
9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Mirza Tahir Hussain, freed prisoner:
"I'm glad to be back home again, thank you much."
10. Mirza Hussain and his brother leaving news conference
STORYLINE
A British man on Pakistan's death row for 18 years returned home on Friday following an act of clemency by President General Pervez Musharraf.
A grey-bearded and weary Mirza Tahir Hussain, 36, emerged from a British Airways plane at Heathrow Airport just hours after being freed from prison and flown out of Pakistan to be greeted by his brother, Amjad.
Hussain said, in a prepared statement read by one of his most ardent supporters, European Parliament member Sajjad Haider Karim, that it had been a tremendous strain being away from his family for so long.
"Freedom is a great gift. I want to use this freedom to get to know my family again and to adjust back to living here and to come to terms with my ordeal," said Karim on Hussain's behalf.
In his speech he also mentioned the prisoners he left behind and Hussain said his thoughts were with them
He also paid tribute and specific thanks to Musharraf, Prince Charles and British Prime Minister Tony Blair for their support.
Hussain, who faced death by hanging after being convicted of murdering a taxi driver in 1988, had always maintained he was defending himself from an armed sexual assault when Jamshed Khan was shot to death.
Musharraf gave an order on Wednesday that Hussain's death sentence should be commuted to a life sentence.
Under Pakistan's sentencing rules, a life sentence is actually equivalent to 14 years, which means Hussain has served his time, an official from the president's office said on condition of anonymity because of prohibitions on speaking to the media.
Hussain was being held at the high-security Adiala prison in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.
On the day he arrived, Hussain was picked up by the taxi driver, Khan, who the Briton claimed pulled out a gun and tried to sexually assault him.
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(17 Nov 2006) SHOTLIST
++AUDIO QUALITY AS INCOMING++
1. Wide of exterior of Adyala jail
2. Close up of security picket
3. Wide of family of dead taxi driver, Jamshad Khan
4. Mid of Khan's father
5. STILL of Jamshad Khan
6. Wide of Khan's holding STILL of him
7. SOUNDBITE (Urdu): Sohbat Khan, uncle of the driver
"So this news was very shocking for us, very shocking, which made us sad. Although we were waiting for justice but our rulers, just to please their foreign rulers,Tony Blair, Prince Charles and the people belonging to the European Union and other organisations, they have added to our injuries."
8. Wide of Khan's family
9. Set up of driver's lawyer
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Rab Nawaz Noon, lawyer of the driver:
"Five judges of the Supreme Court of Afghanistan have unanimously rejected the appeal of Mirza Tahir Hussain and his (inaudible) too was rejected, and then (inaudible) too was rejected by the President and I believe there is no (inaudible) for the President once again grant his clemency and all these things we've seen in the press, Tony Blair, Prince Charles and people of the Europe Union are pressurising the president and the president would have repelled this pressure and would have upheld the rule of law but unfortunately things are the other way round."
11. Wide of Noon
STORYLINE
A British man on death row for 18 years in Pakistan was freed on Friday morning, two days after President General Pervez Musharraf granted him clemency, officials said.
Mirza Tahir Hussain, who has maintained his innocence for killing a taxi driver, Jamshad Khan, was freed ahead of a weekend visit by British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
However the Khan's family expressed shock at the decision.
"We were waiting for justice but our rulers, just to please their foreign rulers,Tony Blair, Prince Charles and the people belonging to the European Union and other organisations, they have added to our injuries," said Sohbat Khan.
Khan's lawyer, Rab Nawaz Noon, also claimed that foreign pressure led to Hussain's release.
Musharraf gave an order on Wednesday that Hussain's death sentence should be commuted to a life sentence.
Under Pakistan's sentencing rules, a life sentence is actually equivalent to 14 years, which means Hussain has served his time, an official from the president's office said on condition of anonymity because of prohibitions on speaking to the media.
Hussain was being held at the high-security Adiala prison in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.
His whereabouts were not immediately known on Friday, but British High Commission officials have been closely following his case and pushing for his release.
Diplomats were not immediately available for comment.
Hussain was 18 in 1988 when he travelled to his ancestral home of Pakistan for the first time to visit relatives in the Punjab province town of Chakwal.
On the day he arrived, Hussain was picked up by the taxi driver, Khan, who the Briton claimed pulled out a gun and tried to sexually assault him. During a struggle, the driver was fatally shot. Hussain drove the cab and the body to a police station, where he was arrested.
Hussain was convicted and sentenced to death in 1989 for murder, then acquitted in 1996 by a higher court.
However, an Islamic court overturned the acquittal and convicted him of armed robbery, sentencing him to death in 1998 - a penalty that under Islamic law must be carried out unless the victim's family decides to pardon him.
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Mirza Tahir Hussain (born 1 June 1970) is a British man paroled on 17 November 2006 after spending 18 years on death row in Pakistan for the murder of a taxicab driver named Jamshed Khan in 1988, a crime which he says he committed in self-defence, as Khan pulled out a gun and tried to sexually assault him. In the ensuing struggle, the gun went off, fatally injuring Khan. Mirza was held in the Adiala jail in Rawalpindi. His representative is Greg Mulholland, MP for Leeds North West.
Conviction
His conviction was quashed by the Pakistani Supreme Court, but he was then found guilty by The Federal Sharia Court. He was due to be hanged on 1 June 2006.The execution was delayed multiple times from the initial June 2006 date. The first delay, from June to August, may have resulted from an effort to avoid an execution during a visit to Pakistan by Prince Charles. A second delay moved the scheduled date back to 1 September 2006. This would reportedly give Mr. Hussain's family time to negotiate blood money with the relatives of the victim, a practice under Islamic law. The next delay, to 1 October 2006 at 0500 BST, may have been related to the observation of the holy month of Ramadan.
... catches and run Hussain Talat out off a superb throw from UsmanKhan ... Mirza Tahir scored 8 (9), Fakhar Zaman6 (7) SikandarRaza 1 (3) and Hussain Talat 4 (10) were the other batters who fell cheaply.