posted 10/22/09 01:05 PM | updated 10/22/09 11:52 PM

Disappeared Pakistani woman facing trial in New York

 From former P-I foreign editor Larry Johnson's blog: Looking for Trouble .

On Monday, Nov. 2, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani woman who studied at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Brandeis University, is scheduled to go on trial in New York for allegedly trying to kill FBI agents in Afghanistan.

Siddiqui, according to the official U.S. version of events, was arrested in Afghanistan on July 17, 2008, for “suspicious behavior.” On July 18, while still in custody, so that version goes, the 90-pound neuroscientist grabbed an unattended rifle and attempted to shoot the agents before she was wounded by gunfire.

Before news of her arrest in Afghanistan, no one, at least publicly, had heard of Siddiqui since she was disappeared by Pakistani intelligence forces in 2003 (She likely was picked up because U.S. intelligence agencies were saying she had terrorist links). A report in the Pakistani press said that Siddiqui and her kids, then 7, 5, and 6 months old, had been seen being detained by Pakistani authorities. Days later, a spokesman for Pakistan's interior ministry and two unnamed U.S. officials confirmed that she was in custody and being interrogated. Several days later, however, Pakistani and American officials apparently changed their minds, saying it was unlikely she was being held.

Siddiqui's mother, Ismet, has said that a few days after Siddiqui's disappearance, a man on a motorcycle arrived at her house and told her Aafia was being held and that she should keep quiet if she ever wanted to see her daughter and grandchildren again.

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The treatment and fate of Siddiqui’s children, who are all U.S. citizens, is one of many troubling aspects of this case. The oldest, 11-year-old Ahmed, who had been detained with his mother in Afghanistan, was recently released from Afghan custody into his aunt’s care. Siddiqui has said that her younger son died in custody; her 5-year-old daughter remains unaccounted for.

Interestingly enough, on July 7, 2008, only about two weeks before Siddiqui’s arrest, Yvonne Ridley, a British journalist and patron of Cage Prisoners, a human rights organization, had sparked an uproar by calling a press conference in Islamabad to demand that the United States hand over an unidentified female prisoner being held at the U.S.-run Bagram prison in Afghanistan.

Ridley said the woman, whom she called the “Gray Lady of Bagram,” had been held in solitary confinement for years. And while no one knew for sure the identity of that prisoner, Ridley said she thought it was Siddiqui. Several former U.S. captives have also reported that a female prisoner, known only as prisoner 650, was being held in Bagram. And according to news reports, the former captives said she had lost her sanity, and cried all the time.

Ridley had written previously about “Prisoner 650" and her four-year ordeal of torture and repeated rapes, saying that her cries had prompted the male prisoners to go on a hunger strike. And, at the Islamabad press conference, Ridley said she called her a “Gray Lady” because she was almost a “ghost, a specter whose cries and screams continue to haunt those who heard her.”

Ridley is an award-winning journalist who was detained for 11 days by the Taliban in 2001 while on an assignment in Afghanistan. Months after her release she converted to Islam.

Siddiqui supporters plan a rally for the opening day of her trial in front of the U.S. District Court in New York City.

 

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Yvonne Ridley's credibility suspect
You report Yvonne Ridley's claim that Aafia was the "Gray Lady of Bagram" and that she had been held in solitary confinement there for years. Ridley has not one iota of evidence to support this. The U.S. has flat out denied that Aafia was held at Bagram, and stated she was in U.S. custody only after she was arrested in July 2008. So how is it you report Ridley's unsubstantiated allegation, yet you don't report the U.S. government's response to that allegation?
Comment by Margaret
3 months ago
( --1 votes)
Yvonne Ridley responds
Margaret,
First off I know exactly who you are.
Secondly, you fail to mention that the US authorities originally denied ever holding a female at Bagram and when I confronted them with the evidence they capitulated and issued a statement saying that Prisoner 650 DID exist after all.
Since then 'margaret' I've found several other witnesses who saw Aafia Siddiqui in Bagram, one of them is ex-US torture victim Binyam Mohammed who has gone on record he is "100 per cent sure" the woman he saw in Bagram was Siddiqui.
I only deal in facts - and when the facts come out in the trial Aafia Siddiqui will walk free.
Furthermore I wonder why the prosectuion has now asked for a second extension and adjournment ... last July they claimed their case was water tight and now it appears to be leaking like a sieve. The truth will out.
Yvonne Ridley
London, UK
Comment by Yvonne Ridley
3 months ago
( +1 votes)
Not true
I worked at Bagram, and I am telling you for a fact that Aafia was not held there ever. I've seen the picture of 650, who was released in Early 2004, and it is not the same person as Aafia. Furthermore for someone to take the word of Binyam Mohammad, whose lawyer confessed on CNN that he had attended terrorist training camps, is just mind boggling stupid.
Comment by Alan
3 months ago
( --1 votes)
mind boggling stupid
what is mind boggling stupid is you know whenyvonne is saying some thing which you think is incorrect it bothers you,however when a women is abducted ripped off of her children,tortured,and thousabds of such people killed,driven away from homes,it is not mind boggling to you.sowhat if 650 is not Afia.isn't 650 a human being too.there are thousands of human beings who take training to shoot but when a muslim learns it is illegal,this is what is mind boggling stupid!
Comment by najam
3 months ago
( +1 votes)
trial may be held up
See:

http://johnnydwyer.net/crashinslowmotion/?p=171

Also, Siddiqui's alleged statements:

http://johnnydwyer.net/crashinslowmotion/?p=72

And, the scene of the alleged crime:

http://johnnydwyer.net/crashinslowmotion/?p=104
Comment by ben
3 months ago
( 0 votes)
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