SCOTTISH church leaders have urged the UK Government to offer asylum to a Pakistani Christian woman facing threats to her life after being acquitted of blasphemy.

Asia Bibi was released following eight years on death row in Pakistan – sparking violent protests by hardliners – after being accused of insulting the Prophet Muhammad.

Last week, her husband Ashiq Masih called for the UK to grant the mother and her family refuge amid fears for their safety after the Pakistan Supreme Court overturned her continued detention. Seven Scottish church leaders including the Rt Rev Susan Brown, moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, and the Most Rev Leo Cushley, Roman Catholic Archbishop of

St Andrews and Edinburgh, have now signed an open letter which has been sent to Home Secretary Sajid Javid urging him to grant Bibi asylum.

The church leaders have also reiterated a call for Javid to immediately give the Glasgow-based Umeed Bakhsh family the right to remain in the UK, saying it is clear their lives would be in danger if they were deported to Pakistan.

On Bibi, the letter states: “Asia was acquitted on October 31. Although she has been reportedly reunited with her husband and three children, she needs round-the-clock protection as Tehreek-e-Labbaik (an Islamist political party in Pakistan) has called

for her to be hanged and there have been several cases of extra-judicial killings of people charged with blasphemy in Pakistan.

“The threat to Asia and her family and supporters is real. The root cause is, of course, Pakistan’s blasphemy laws and we urge the UK Government to do all in its power to advocate for these laws to be amended to prevent their misuse and to promote tolerance and harmony between faith communities.”

The church leaders said violent protests that erupted in Pakistan after Bibi’s conviction was quashed highlight the dangers facing Christians in the country, where blasphemy carries the death penalty.

Back in Scotland, the Umeed Bakhsh family – Maqsood, Parveen and their sons Somer, 15, and Areeb, 13 – fled to Glasgow in 2012 after their lives were threatened due to their Christian faith.

More than 92,000 people have signed two petitions calling on the Home Office to allow them to stay, however the UK Government has rejected their plea for asylum, the Church of Scotland said.

The letter to Javid states: “We stand with the Christian community in Pakistan and request that the UK Government takes action to protect minority faith communities and ensure justice for all.

“With all respect, we urge you and through you, the Home Office, to grant asylum to Asia Bibi and her family in recognition of the United Kingdom’s continuing commitment to freedom of religion and belief.

“This case has put into sharp focus the dangers facing Christians in Pakistan and to that end we would implore you to grant the Umeed Bakhsh family the right to remain in the United Kingdom.”