A Pakistani Christian and father of four, Asif was sentenced to death after seven years in custody for a series of "blasphemous" text messages.
In 2013, Asif Pervaiz, a Pakistani Christian, was arrested over an accusation his workplace supervisor attached to him. Asif, his supervisor said, had sent him “blasphemous” text messages. Asif, on the contrary, denies this ever occurred, and has long maintained that in the conversation in question, his supervisor was trying to get him to convert to Islam; when Asif refused, his supervisor allegedly took the course of the accusation out of anger.
"Victims of blasphemy [accusations] are neither safe in courts nor police stations ... Our country cannot progress or cooperate with other countries without a soft image and a decrease in daily news of persecution." - Nadeem Bhatti, Pakistani-Canadian human rights activist
Whatever the truth of the matter, in September 2020, after seven long years of detention, the situation worsened dramatically. A verdict had been reached in Asif’s case: he was sentenced to death. His future remains unclear, but Asif and his lawyer apparently intend to appeal the verdict.

Pakistan is one of the most repressive countries in the world with regard to freedom of expression, including and especially religious freedom. Blasphemy (i.e. insults) against religion in general can result in imprisonment, while blasphemy against Islam carries the much harsher punishment of death. Both in terms of the aggressiveness with which the Islamic-conservative government prosecutes such cases, as well as the harshness of punishment, Pakistan remains one of the worst places on the planet to speak out against religion or religious fundamentalism.