Monday, February 14, 2011

Dr. Aafia Siddiqui: Key Evidence of 2003 Kidnapping Just Released IJN


Photo from IJN and found on many other sites.

IN BRIEF:. "IJN has obtained a secret audio recording of a senior Pakistani police official who admits he was personally involved in the arrest of Dr. Siddiqui and her children five years ago This account is corroborated by substantial documentary evidence and witness testimony, which all points to the same conclusion—that Dr. Siddiqui and her three children were initially arrested in March 2003 with the knowledge and cooperation of local authorities in Karachi, Pakistan, and subsequently interrogated by Pakistani military intelligence (ISI) as well as U.S. intelligence agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

'This shameful new revelation will not only establish a stage for holding specific political actors accountable for the grave injustice done to Dr. Siddiqui and her family, but should serve as a keystone for repairing the severed diplomatic ties between Pakistan and the United States."

IJN Releases New Evidence in Case of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui and adds call to that of many Pakistanis for Aafia's Repatriation

HOME for IJN here | International Justice Network - (IJNetwork) leads human rights initiatives around the world by providing direct legal assistance and expertise to victims... IJN also "partners with law firms, grassroots organizations, and educational..."(rights groups)...

Also go here

IJN Press Release

February 14, 2011, New York, NY. Early Monday morning, International Justice Network published a report regarding the highly controversial case of Dr. Aafia Siddiqui. Representing the Siddiqui Family in the United States, IJN has spent the past 14 months researching the circumstances surrounding the unusual arrest and custody of the Pakistani mother of three. Supported with previously unreleased evidence, IJN has uncovered direct involvement by Pakistan agencies in the disappearance of Dr. Aafia and her three young children in March 2003 -- five years before the US government claims she was first arrested in Afghanistan in July 2008.

The report, Aafia Siddiqui: Just the Facts, reveals shocking new evidence that contradicts official statements from governments of both Pakistan and the United States that Dr. Siddiqui was not detained in their custody prior to her arrest in 2008. IJN has obtained a secret audio recording of a senior Pakistani police official who admits he was personally involved in the arrest of Dr. Siddiqui and her children eight years ago. This account is corroborated by substantial documentary evidence and witness testimony, which all points to the same conclusion—that Dr. Siddiqui and her three children were initially arrested in March 2003 with the knowledge and cooperation of local authorities in Karachi, Pakistan, and subsequently interrogated by Pakistani military intelligence (ISI) as well as U.S. intelligence agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

This shameful new revelation will not only establish a stage for holding specific political actors accountable for the grave injustice done to Dr. Siddiqui and her family, but should serve as a keystone for repairing the severed diplomatic ties between Pakistan and the United States. In a letter to Interior Minister, Rehman Malik, last week, IJN Executive Director, Tina M. Foster, urged the government of Pakistan to take immediate action to demand Dr. Siddiqui's repatriation, while the U.S. government is seeking the return of the Lahore shooter. In it, Ms. Foster stated:

"The safety and security of all Pakistani citizens is compromised when U.S. government agents can kill civilians on Pakistani soil with impunity, while the daughter of the nation (who has never caused harm or injury to anyone) languishes in a Texas prison for a crime she didn’t commit. Justice demands that Raymond Davis not be repatriated to the United States without securing the return of Dr. Siddiqui to Pakistan. The path is now clear. The only question that remains is whether the government of Pakistan is willing to take it."

To access report documents, please go to any number of the sites listed in this post and in the post just below.

3 comments:

connie nash said...

Among other postings, also see Justice for Aafia dot org with "Just the Facts" an easy read and listen to the new press release:

http://justiceforaafia.org/articles/press-releases/734-aafia-siddiqui-just-the-facts

connie nash said...

Keep returning to these sites listed above in this posting - especially to:

Free Aafia dot org The Official Family Site and be sure to see other items besides this Just In such concerns regarding her idolation and severe if not torturous conditions in notorious Carswell. Note the campaign to bring Aafia some sense of normalacy via reading materials. Pay attention to recommended format and content on Free Aafia dot org.

CN said...

Last updated: 52 mins ago as of 3 pm ET Feb. 15 2011:

Wahab’s comment on Davis not official, says Presidency

This is neither the policy of the party nor the government, added Farhatullah Babar.

He said the government and party had “made it very clear that Raymond Davis’ case is before court and the court will decide the issue”.

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari’s spokesman on Monday dismissed a statement given by a Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) spokeswoman about Raymond Davis, saying that it was her personal view.

The PPP information secretary Fozia Wahab in an attempt to dilute anger over a US official accused of murdering two Pakistanis had said that diplomats have immunity and Davis had an official visa.