The Plight of Prisoner No. 650, Dr. Afia
Siddiqui
By Abdus Sattar Ghazali
American Perspective, August 20, 2008
After intensive civil rights groups pressure and angry protests in
Pakistan, the US authorities have formally acknowledged arresting
Dr. Afia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist, five years after her
mysterious disappearance in Karachi with her three teen age kids.
On August 5, the FBI suddenly produced Dr. Siddiqui in a New York
court to charge her with possessing documents including recipes for
explosives and chemical weapons and description of New York land
marks plus firing two shots at a US army captain which, very
conveniently, missed.
But the story of the circumstances, the timing and the place from
where she had been picked up that the Americans purveyed for the
world to believe hardly sounds credible.
According to the charge sheet, Dr Siddiqui was loitering outside the
compound of Ghazni Governor in Afghanistan on July 17 this year when
she was taken into custody and had in her possession numerous
documents on making explosives, chemical weapons and other weapons
involving biological material and neurological agents. Then while
under detention at the notorious Bagram airbase cell she shot at
American officials after getting hold of a rifle of one of them.
Tellingly, the story of the Afghan police in Ghazni contradicts the
FBI charge sheet. The Afghan police said officers searched Siddiqui
after reports of her suspicious behavior and found maps of Ghazni,
including one of the governor’s house, and arrested her along with a
teenage boy. US troops requested the woman be handed over to them
but the police refused. US soldiers then disarmed the Afghan police,
at which point Siddiqui approached the Americans complaining of
mistreatment by the police. The US troops thinking that she had
explosives and would attack them as a suicide bomber, shot her and
took her.
According to the New York Times, the United States intelligence
agencies have said that she had links to at least 2 of the 14 men
suspected of being high-level members of Al Qaeda who were moved to
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, in September 2006. The charges against her,
however, do not appear to be related to those allegations, but to
her assault on the Americans who were about to question her.
The hearing cleared up none of the mysteries that have surrounded
Ms. Siddiqui’s case since she disappeared with her three children
while visiting her parents’ home in Karachi, Pakistan, in March
2003.
Dr. Afia’s bail application has been rejected and if recent court
cases against the Muslims have any resonation, it appears that the
FBI will try to keep her behind the bars indefinitely even if she is
acquitted by a jury.
More than two and half years, after failing to convict Palestinian
activist and a former professor of South Florida University, Dr.
Sami al-Arian, before a Florida jury, the government has continued
to use all means to prolong his confinement. Dr. al-Arian has
completed his nearly five-year prison term but remains in custody.
Only three weeks before his scheduled release date of April 7, 2008
he was informed on March 19 that he would be called to testify
before a third grand jury in Virginia. On June 25, 2008, he was
indicted on two counts of criminal contempt for refusing to testify
before a federal grand jury. On July 10, at a bail hearing at
Alexandria, Virginia, Judge Leonie Brinkema ordered Dr. Sami
Al-Arian, released but he remained in prison since the judge refused
to block immigration authorities from detaining him as a prelude to
his deportation.
Similarly, in November 2007, Dr. Abdelhaleem Ashqar, a
Palestinian-American and former professor at Washington's Howard
University, was sentenced to more than 11 years imprisonment for
refusing to testify before a grand jury looking into possible terror
financing in the Middle East. Tellingly, in February 2007 Dr. Ashqar
was acquitted of all terror-related charges.
The twisted story of Dr. Afia’s arrest is one of the strangest since
the 9/11 attacks on the United States. Pakistan’s leading newspaper
The Nation may be right when it says: “If a PhD from Brandeis
(Harvard) in behavioral neuroscience needs to keep documents in
front of her to make explosives, it must be a very poor standard of
education. And if GIs can pass on guns to ‘dangerous criminals’ in
custody, the superpower needs to have better trained, tougher
soldiers to keep its global overlordship. It seems secret agents
everywhere are adept at fabricating charges that cannot bear
scrutiny.”
It will not be too much to say that the insinuation, that she had
been hiding herself since 2003, is a travesty of the truth and an
affront to people’s common sense. Dr Aafia’s case is a reminder of
the grave injustice done to many people in the US detention
facilities in Bagram in Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay in Cuba and
elsewhere.
Read Full article:
http://www.amperspective.com/html/dr__afia_siddiqui.html
Abdus Sattar Ghazali is the Executive Editor of the online magazine
American Muslim Perspective:
www.amperspective.com
Email: asghazali@gmail.com
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