The accused 43-year-old Abdul Basit is now set to be hanged in Faisalabad District Jail.
With his impending hanging, the number of executions will touch 300 since the moratorium on the death penalty was lifted by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif following the Pakistani Taliban's deadly attack on an army school in Peshawar last December that killed 150 people, mostly children.
Lahore High Court Judge Qazi Amin dismissed the appeal of Basit to stay his death warrant terming it "non-maintainable".
Dismissing his appeal, the judge observed asking who would protect the "right of the victim".
Meanwhile, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has appealed to Sharif to stay the execution of Basit.
In a letter to Sharif, the HRCP said it was the third time that execution warrants had been issued for Basit.
He was first scheduled to be hanged on July 29, but the execution was stayed at the eleventh hour by the Lahore High Court on a writ petition challenging the legality of his execution. On September 1, that petition was dismissed.
In 2010, while in jail, Basit contracted TB which left him paralysed from the waist down. Despite being unable to stand, and reliant on a wheelchair, he is set to be hanged tomorrow.
The HRCP said Basit's mercy petition is still pending and that the president had also requested the interior ministry to consider the pending mercy petition which it described as "self-explanatory".
"HRCP is of the view that the hanging of a wheelchair -bound prisoner simply cannot be conducted in a humane and dignified manner as required by Pakistani and international law. Proceeding with Abdul Basit's execution in the circumstances will offend against all norms of civilised justice," it said.
