Leftie journalist with a lot of imagination.

B

A COUNTERPUNCH SPECIAL REPORT
A New Turn as Lawyers Release Explosive, Secretly Recorded Tape
The Siddiqui Case
By VICTORIA BRITTAIN
http://www.counterpunch.org/brittain02142011.html

In 2003 an MIT-educated expert in children's learning patterns, Dr Aafia
Siddiqui, disappeared with her three children in Pakistan. Was she, as the
Americans said, an Al Qaeda operative who in 2008 emerged after five years
undercover, carrying a handbag full of chemicals and plans for major terror
attacks in the US, and then attempted to shoot US soldiers? Or was she, as
her family, and most people in Pakistan have always maintained, seized by
Pakistani agents for reasons unknown?

Now new evidence of the kidnapping of Dr Siddiqui prises open part of one of
the most shocking of the myriad individual stories of injustice in the war
on terror. It also underlines the recklessness and perfidy of a key United
States' partner in the war on terror, which carries its own threat of
explosion.

Dr Siddiqui was sentenced in a New York court last year to 86 years for
attempted murder of US soldiers in Afghanistan. Her mysterious five-year
disappearance before that, her reappearance in Afghanistan in 2008, her
subsequent trial in the US, and the confusion surrounding all these events,
have made Dr Siddiqui's a symbolic case in much of the Muslim world. Now a
senior law enforcement officer has claimed to have been involved personally
on the day she was seized, with her three children, by Pakistani police
agents in Karachi in March 2003 and handed over to the Pakistani
intelligence agency, the ISI.

The FBI put out a "wanted for questioning" alert for Dr Siddiqui just before
she disappeared. She was later high on the US wanted list, with the US
claiming that she was living undercover as an Al Qaeda agent. She was a
"clear and present danger to the US", the then-U.S. Attorney General John
Ashcroft said in 2004. For all these years the Pakistani government
repeatedly denied holding her, and after her arrest in Afghanistan in 2008
spent $2 million on US lawyers for her trial. After her conviction, the
Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani, committed himself to work for
her return from a US prison. Dr Siddiqui had become, "the daughter of the
nation" and the centre of a popular cause he could not afford to ignore.

The new evidence, on a secretly recorded audio tape, is a potential
earthquake in the chronically unstable political situation in Pakistan,
where rage against the US runs deep and wide, especially as civilian
casualties mount with the use of drone aircraft. Already the case of Aafia
Siddiqui has periodically brought tens of thousands of people out on the
streets in the last two and a half years in protest at what has been done to
her by the United States' military and legal systems since she reemerged, in
US custody and seriously wounded, in 2008. The Pakistani media have always
claimed that the ISI was responsible for her disappearance and that the
Americans were involved too. The tape reopens the whole question, not just
of Dr Siddiqui, but of the corroding effect of the US alliance with
Pakistan's military and intelligence elite in a war on terror which has had
so many Pakistani victims. The ISI has run its own agendas, hand in glove
with various US officials at various periods, ever since the war against the
Soviets in Afghanistan, and then becoming godfathers of various Afghan
factions tearing that country apart. There are plenty of astute Pakistani
journalists with the language skills to use this tape to the utmost to
embarrass their own security services and the government.

For the US too there are questions to answer about the extensive cover-up of
what happened to Dr Siddiqui and her three children - two of whom are US
citizens, and appear to have spent five traumatized years separated from
their mother and from each other, in various prisons. It is scarcely
credible that high officials in the Bush and Obama administrations over the
years were unaware of what their troublesome allies in Pakistan had done
with her and her children.

On April 21 2003, a "senior U.S. law enforcement official" told Lisa Myers
of NBC Nightly News that Siddiqui was in Pakistani custody. The same source
retracted the statement the next day without explanation. "At the time,"
Myers told Harpers Magazine, "we thought there was a possibility perhaps
he'd spoken out of turn."

According to the Associated Press, "[t]wo federal law enforcement officials,
speaking on condition of anonymity, initially said 31-year-old Aafia
Siddiqui recently was taken into custody by Pakistani authorities." But
later, "the U.S. officials amended their earlier statements, saying new
information from the Pakistani government made it `doubtful' she was in
custody."

An FBI spokesperson also formally denied that the agency had any knowledge
of Dr. Siddiqui's whereabouts, stating that the FBI was not aware that she
was in any nation's custody.

Dr Siddiqui's mother was visited by an unknown man a few hours after her
disappearance and warned to keep her mouth shut if she ever wanted to see
her daughter and grandchildren again. In 2003, in a closed hearing when the
FBI had subpoenaed some documents from Dr Siddiqui's sister, an FBI official
confirmed to her family that she was alive and well, but would answer no
questions on her whereabouts.

The new audio evidence was secretly taped in a social situation last year;
children can be heard in the background. It was given, unsolicited, to one
of the many lawyers involved in Dr Siddiqui's case in the US. The source,
whose identity has been protected, told lawyers at the International Justice
Network that he had made the tape after a social evening when he had heard
shocking things about Pakistani counter terrorism, about the fabrication of
evidence, and about Dr Siddiqui's disappearance, discussed casually by a
senior official. He felt outraged and returned for a second evening with a
recorder and got some of the previous discussion repeated. "If it can help
anyone I had to do it," he said to the IJN Executive Director Tina Foster
who has represented Dr Siddiqui's family since January 2010. IJN are
experienced hands in war on terror cases. They represent a number of
prisoners in Bagram air base prison in Afghanistan, some of them rendered
from Abu Ghraib, Dubai and Thailand by the CIA, as well as several
disappeared people in Pakistan.)

The witness is a Pakistani/American and he has been extensively interviewed
by IJN's lawyers who tell me they are entirely confident of the tape's
authenticity, the source's account and thus the identity of the prime
subject. 

IJN's source says he was introduced by a mutual friend whose home he was
visiting, to a man he identified to lawyers at International Justice Network
as Imran Shaukat, the Superintendent of Police for Sindh province.

A full report, and the four hour tape, in Urdu, Punjabi and English, is
being released by the International Justice Network in the United States at
6am EDT Monday, and can be accessed here 
http://ijnetwork.org/
and, here 
https://sites.google.com/a/ijnetwork.org/dr-aafia-siddiqui-report/
with the permission of the witness. Portions of the tape concerning Dr
Siddiqui were made available to this reporter and were independently
translated for this article. As of midnight Sunday, EDT, this excerpt can be
listened to here.

Mr Shaukat (who is voice 2 on the tape) says, "I am stationed in Karachi. I
head the counter terrorism department for Sindh province."

In the key passage in the tape for the Siddiqui case he is asked by:

Voice 1 (who is the witness) "Did you arrest her?"

V 2. "Yes, I arrested her. She wore glasses and a veil... When she was
caught she was travelling to Islamabad..She was hobnobbing with clerics. ...

V 1 " So what happened after the arrest. Did ISI ask for her custody?"

V 2 "Yes, we gave her to ISI"

V 1 "ISI or something else?"

V 2 "ISI, so we gave her to them."

Mr Shaukat also describes her as "stick thin" and "a psycho", and, elsewhere
as "not a handler, a minor facilitator" - presumably for Al Qaeda - and he
mentions a connection to Osama Bin Laden. Asked then why couldn't she help
them get Bin Laden, he replies, "Well, they are not fools. They wouldn't
inform her of their forwarding address." And he says too about the children,
"we took them with us. They were American nationals, children are American
nationals, they were all born there."

There is some discussion on the tape about the return of her daughter,
Maryam. (Two unidentified voices are also heard.)

V1: Oh, another thing. They found her daughter yesterday.

V2: She's home already.

V1: Yes, she's home. She speaks English only. She was in the prison. She is
seven or eight years old. And she only speaks English. 

UM1: Eight years old? 

V1: Yeah. Children were in prison and they spoke to them in American
English.

UM1: Is she home?

V1: Yeah. They got her home.

V2: They were actually, I.

V1: Really?

V2: It's five or six months.

UM2: Is she in Karachi?

V1: She got home today, yesterday.

V2: Well, it goes back to before I came here.

V1: I read the news just yesterday, today. Maybe, in the night.

V2: It's two or three-months old. 

All that has been reported in the public domain to date is that Maryam was
returned a day or two before the recording. But, according to the childrens'
lawyer, Tina Foster, Mr Shaukat's description is consistent with how Maryam
was repatriated to Pakistan.

Elsewhere in the tape Imran Shaukat talks about how the Pakistani police and
ISI work to "disappear" or to use people they have taken into custody.
According to Amina Masood Janjua at Defence for Human Rights, there are
currently about 500 people who have disappeared in Pakistan as part of the
"war on terror" - this does not include Sindhi and Balochi separatists. Part
of the audio describes the doctoring or manufacturing of documents, creating
false identities, using body doubles, with reference to various terrorist
attacks, including Mumbai. "This is a game of double dealing, direct them
right and exit left," Mr Shaukat says at one point.

Such details are an explanation of the extraordinary litany of contradictory
stories about Dr Siddiqui, including curious reported sightings by family
members, that were launched into the public domain over the five years after
her disappearance. In this John Le Carre world of ruthless manipulation of
the vulnerable it is impossible to know how, or whether, she could have been
used in counter terrorism's goal at the time of finding Osama Bin Laden and
other Al Qaeda leaders in Pakistan.

>From other sources it has been established that Dr Siddiqui was separated
from her children for the five years of her ordeal, and that the two older
children, born in 1996 and 1998, were not together, but in separate prisons,
and that the third child, Suleman who was six months old on the day of the
disappearance, probably died then.

For nearly eight years now, manufactured confusion has surrounded the
disappearance and the subsequent whereabouts of Dr Siddiqui and her three
children.

The confusion only deepened with the second section of the story, which was
her mysterious reappearance in 2008 in Afghanistan, and the bizarre
circumstances of her being seriously wounded by two shots to the stomach by
a US soldier. John Kiriakou, a retired CIA officer with extensive background
in Al Qaeda- related work told ABC News, "I don't think we've captured
anybody as important and as well connected as she since 2003. We knew that
she had been planning, or at least involved in the planning of, a wide
variety of different operations." Such statements set the tone for the
Western media on her return under arrest to the US.

Her subsequent trial in New York, ending with the 86 year sentence, is the
third section, when, extraordinarily, Al Qaeda and terrorism were not made
part of the case against her which was narrowly focussed on the alleged
attempted murder incident.

Dr Siddiqui's background was an unexceptional one of a highly educated young
woman from a privileged, professional family, some of them settled in the US
and most of them educated in the West. She spent a decade studying at
universities in Texas, and at MIT - where she graduated in biology summa cum
laude - and at Brandeis, where she took a PHD in cognitive neuroscience. She
specialized in the science of how children learn, and in addition had a
class teaching dyslexic children. Besides her academic work she lived a busy
life in the Muslim community in Boston, attending cake sales and auctions to
raise money for Muslim refugees in the Bosnian war. She was married to a
doctor from Pakistan in a classic arranged ceremony conducted by phone. The
couple had two children.

Life in Boston soured when her marriage began to break down. There are
reports from her professors in Boston that they saw her with bruises on her
face. And her husband, Dr Amjad Khan, told Harpers Magazine reporter Petra
Bartosiewicz in 2008 that his wife had once had to go to hospital after he
threw a bottle at her. There are photographs of her with a deep cut across
her face. She returned home to Pakistan in late 2001. In a brief
reconciliation back in the US a few months later she became pregnant with
her third child. On August 15, 2002, after an incident in which witnesses
claim that Dr Khan pushed him, Dr. Siddiqui's father collapsed and died of a
heart attack. A few days later, while Dr. Siddiqui was still pregnant with
their youngest child, Suleman, Amjad Khan separated from her and immediately
married again. Dr Khan gave custody of the children to Dr Siddiqui on
condition they received an exclusively Islamic education

Dr Khan came under FBI suspicion in May 2002 for various items purchased by
him on the internet when the couple were living in Boston. He said they were
for big game hunting, and he was not arrested, but both he and his wife had
come under suspicion.

In March, 2003, a global alert went out with both of them wanted for
questioning by the FBI. A few weeks after Aafia Siddiqui disappeared, her
husband had a four-hour interview with US and Pakistani agents, and US
suspicions of Dr Khan were dropped. About two months later Dr Khan travelled
to Saudi Arabia for some time.

Dr Khan told Harpers Magazine - "The Intelligence factory - how America
makes its enemies disappear", by CounterPunch contributor Petra Bartosiewicz
- 
http://www.harpers.org/archive/2009/11/0082719
that his "contacts in the agencies" informed him then that Siddiqui had gone
underground. He went on to say that he had no idea where his children were
-a claim he would later contradict. He also told Harpers that he and his
driver saw Siddiqui in a taxi in Karachi in 2005. But they did not follow
her. After her arrest in 2008 Mr Khan told a reporter from the Pakistani
daily News that he thought his former wife was an "extremist" and that of
course she had been on the run. After Ms Bartosiewicz left Pakistan, she had
an email from Dr Khan saying that he had received "confidential good news"
from the ISI that Mariam and Suleman were "alive and well" with their aunt
Fowzia. (In fact at that point one was in prison and the other was dead.)

Dr Siddiqui's disappearance in March 2003 came amid a feverish whirl of
arrests and disappearances in Pakistan, including Khaled Sheikh Mohammad,
who has claimed to have been the master mind of 9/11, and many other Al
Qaeda related attacks, and has been named as the killer of US journalist
Daniel Pearl in 2002. Khaled Sheikh Mohammad was important enough to the
Americans to be water-boarded 183 times. Shortly after Dr Siddiqui's
disappearance, Khaled Sheikh Mohammad's nephew, Ammar Baluchi, was arrested
in connection with 9/11. The two men were taken to Guantanamo Bay, then to
various CIA-run secret prisons known as "black sites" for torture, before
being returned to Guantanamo Bay.

US officials then had Dr Siddiqui on an Al Qaeda "wanted" list and linked
her to Baluchi, claiming he was her second husband. Her family, and other
sources in Pakistan have denied the marriage, but it remains probably the
most repeated detail about her and the one that has given her an indelible
image as a terrorist. This was not the only lurid story about her - she was
also alleged in a UN report to have been a courier of blood diamonds from
Liberia for Al Qaeda with a sighting reported there in June, 2001. Her
lawyer, Elaine Sharp stated that Dr Siddiqui had been in Boston at that time
and she could prove it. That story died away, but the further damage to her
reputation was done.
For five years nothing sure was in the public domain about what happened to
her and the children, though the rumours grew, turning her into a tragic
martyr for many, or a poster for Al Qaeda ruthlessness for others . Several
former detainees at the Bagram prison in Afghanistan claimed to have seen
her there, while US officials quoted in Wilileaks denied she had been.

A senior Pakistani journalist, Najeed Ahmed, followed the story for five
years and reported witness testimony of someone who claimed to have been
part of the arresting team, which he said was a joint operation with the
FBI. (Mr Ahmed made a public statement about his research in 2009, but died
the next day, reportedly of a heart attack.)

In mid-July 2008 Pakistanti lawyers filed a habeas corpus for Dr Siddiqui in
Islamabad. And within days, in Act 2 of the drama, Aafia Siddiqui
reappeared, in Ghazni, in Afghanistan, allegedly carrying in her handbag
chemicals, instructions for making biological weapons, and plans for
terrorist strikes with mass casualties in the US. She was then involved in a
shooting incident in a police station in Ghazni in which she was badly
wounded by a US soldier. It is uncontested that she was seated behind a
curtain in a small room, where, according to the US soldiers, one of them
put down his gun and she came from behind the curtain, seized it and
attempted to shoot. She says she merely looked round the curtain. None of
the soldiers or FBI personnel present were hurt, but she was hospitalized
with two shots in her abdomen and brought under arrest to the US.

Act 3 was her trial in New York for attempted murder of soldiers and FBI
agents with an M4 rifle, picked up from the floor near a US soldier. There
were no charges of terrorism or Al Qaeda links.

Dr Siddiqui had a tangle of high-flying legal teams, several of whom were
not on good terms. Her first court appointed lawyer, Liz Fink, a famous New
York political lawyer, withdrew, and the second team appointed by the court,
was headed by Dawn Cardi, an expert in matrimonial and family law. The
lawyers funded by the Pakistani government were led by Linda Moreno, an
attorney with successful experiences in two high profile war on terror
related cases, those of Professor Sami Al-Arian and Ghassan Elashi, and who
is a Guantanamo Bay defence lawyer with security clearance. Ms Moreno is
also known for earlier political work as one of the lawyers for the American
Indian Movement leader Leonard Peltier. Her team included Charles Swift,
formerly a military defender of Guantanamo detainees who made a reputation
as a critic of the Military Commission system, and Elaine Sharp.

Even the narrow grounds of the case on the shooting was full of curiosities
and contradictions: there was no physical evidence on the gun of Dr Siddiqui
having held it, no bullet casings from it or holes in the walls of the small
room where it took place, except from the other gun which wounded her.
Defence counsel made two visits to Afghanistan to get the forensic evidence,
which could, and should, have got the whole case dismissed. Linda Moreno
described the defence forensic case as "very compelling, with no physical
evidence whatsoever that she ever touched the gun..no DNA, no fingerprints,
no bullets recovered, no bullet holes." The military and FBI witnesses, Ms
Moreno said, contradicted each other, and under cross-examination even
contradicted their own earlier stories. She went on to say that "the
government wanted to scare the jury with stories of her alleged terrorist
past, and steered away from the actual case."

One key piece of evidence was not in the trial and only emerged from
Wikileaks, which revealed a Defense Department report that was not released
by the military, so was unavailable as evidence in Dr Siddiqui's defence.
The incident report does not say Dr Siddiqui fired the gun she is alleged to
have snatched and fired, merely that she "pointed" it. "Six American
soldiers took the stand - powerful testimony for a jury. I argued, what
happened at the front, stays at the front. The Wikileaks document would have
added to my argument about the dubious credibility of the soldiers," Ms
Moreno told me.

Dr Siddiqui's relations with her lawyers were impossibly difficult and she
tried repeatedly to fire them. Most never saw her except in court. Linda
Moreno told me, "She was clearly damaged - extraordinarily frail, very tiny.
It broke my heart when Aafia did not trust anyone, me, the other
lawyers..although I could understand it. She reminded me of American/Indian
resisters I worked with way back... her resistance was clearly to the legal
process and she saw all the attorneys as part of that process."

Against the lawyers' strongest advice, Dr Siddiqui spoke in court herself.
She said that she had been tortured, and rendered to the US, and that her
children were also tortured in "the secret prison". The government never
rebutted these allegations. But she lost the jury, who looked openly
sceptical. "Sadly, she came over as sometimes arrogant and capricious, and
sometimes rambling" according to Ms Moreno. Another observer said, "she was
very articulate, intelligent, well-spoken, and people mistook that for well
functioning."

With so much confected fear and prejudice against her going back years, a
media that did not hold back in its characterization of her as Al Qaeda
Mommy, and the impact of six soldiers testifying against her, a New York
jury's guilty verdict was probably a foregone conclusion. But Judge Berman's
sentence that would put her away for life, was not. Ms Moreno described the
event, "in my 30 years of trials I have never seen anything like what
happened on sentencing day - the judge walked into court and handed out
pre-printed power point presentations on how he had come to decide on 86
years..."

Two veteran lawyers not connected with this case, but with extensive
experience in other cases related to the war on terror, described the
sentence, respectively, as "extraordinary", "ridiculous... outrageous", and
one described the case as "absolutely full of holes." An appeal is planned.

Meanwhile part of the story of the missing five years is in the heads of two
of her three children - the two older ones who are US citizens. When they
emerged - separately - in Pakistan, they were reunited with Dr Siddiqui's
mother, and her sister , Fowzia, who is a Harvard-trained child psychiatrist
and neurologist, in Karachi. They have never told their stories, but even
the little that is known hints at the horror this family has lived through.

The older one, Ahmed, then aged 12, told his aunt that he only met his
mother the day after she was picked up in Ghazni, and that he did not
recognize her after five years apart. Fuzzy film footage of them together
being questioned in a press conference the day after his mother was found,
has long circulated on the internet. This was the morning before the
shooting incident.

Ahmed remembers nothing about what happened to him next, only that he was
visited by a US consular official in Afghanistan who told him that he was a
US citizen. The official also told him that his brother, Suleman, was dead.

Ahmed remembers being taken out of the taxi where he was with his mother and
siblings five years before, and remembers, before he lost consciousness,
seeing the baby, six month old Suleman, lying in the road and bleeding.
Ahmed, told his aunt that he had been called Ali, and several other
different names, while he was in custody, and that when he was told his name
now was Ahmed, he knew that meant he was going to be moved again. She
initially reported that he was suffering from PTSD and that he needed
extensive psychological help.

His sister Maryam, reappeared nearly two years later, in April 2010. She
spoke perfect English with an American accent and no Urdu. She was simply
dropped off outside the family home in Karachi with a note on a string
around her neck. At some stage the Afghan prime minister Hamid Karzai was
contacted by the family for help in getting both children back.

There are very powerful vested interests that have worked to prevent Dr
Siddiqui from ever giving an account that would be believed of what happened
to her. The same interests are still at work trying to prevent the two
children from ever becoming witnesses in this backstory of the war on
terror. Late last year a kidnap attempt was made on the children, despite
the family home being guarded by armed Pakistani police 24 hours a day. Two
men, carrying firearms and holding big sacks, were found behind the door of
the children's bedroom by their grandmother. The men ran off when she
screamed, and were driven away by a waiting car nearby, before the police
guards to the house could catch them.

The release of the tape gives a lever to Pakistani public opinion and
Pakistani opposition politicians such as Imran Khan, who have long supported
the family, towards forcing an end to this sinister ordeal, with the return
home of Dr Siddiqui.

And there is another lever just now. Tina Foster of IJN has written to the
Interior Minister Mr Rehman Malik, reminding him that in over a year of
meetings he has been promising to help in Dr Siddiqui's repatriation. The
letter says that now, when the US is demanding the return of the US
government employee Raymond Davis, held after a shooting incident in
Pakistan in which he is alleged to have killed two men, is the government's
best ever chance to negotiate an exchange. The new threat by some
congressmen to withhold aid from Pakistan if he is not returned, Hilary
Clinton cancelling a meeting with Pakistan's foreign minister, and the
report of possible espionage charges against Davis, ratchet up a pressure
that could change the prospects for Dr Siddiqui.

Whether Dr Siddiqui will ever be able to tell the full story of what
happened to her over five years is another question. It is hard to imagine
making anything close a recovery from such multiple personal and family
trauma, in which she was isolated from every solid link with her past
identity. Did the ISI use her, or her identity, on errands to Al Qaeda? "A
minor facilitator", as the tape calls her? The contradictions in her own
reported words, such as allegedly telling FBI agents while she was in a
military hospital shot through the stomach and in restraints, that she was
indeed married to the notorious Khaled Sheikh Mohammad's nephew Baluchi, are
manifold, but not any guide to the truth.

In her initial weeks in a US prison in Brooklyn she exhibited deeply
disturbed behaviour such as saying she was saving her food for her children.
Her mental state has since deteriorated and is very unpredictable, according
to lawyer Elaine Sharp who has visited her several times. She is now
incarcerated in solitary confinement in the Carswell Federal Medical Centre
at Fort Worth, Texas, the only US prison medical facility for women. She has
no contact with the outside world. Three of the four prison psychiatrists
who interviewed her for the court said they believed she was "malingering"
and that her mental illness was faked. But, given the record of some
doctors' contribution to government work in the war on terror, it is hard to
find this persuasive in the face of the known facts of her separation from
her children in traumatic circumstances, her long isolation, and the
documented brutal procedures of the ISI in many other cases.

In the US none of the lawyers, doctors, politicians and intelligence agents
who devised and participated in the horrors done to so many individuals as
part of the war on terror, have paid any price in public for it. But in this
case there is the force of public opinion in Pakistan which will demand
nothing less than public trials of those responsible for ordering Dr
Siddiqui's kidnapping, as well as those who carried it out, and were part of
the vast charade that has been played with her over those years.

Victoria Brittain is a former associate foreign editor of the Guardian. Her
books include Hidden Lives, Hidden Deaths and Death of Dignity. She has
spent much of her working life in Asia, Africa and the Middle East. She can
be reached at [email protected]
<mailto:victoriacatherine%40yahoo.com> 



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