Wednesday, February 3, 2010

US frame-up of Aafia Siddiqui begins to unravel

Pakistani scientist Aafia Siddiqui Neuro went to trial in federal court room in New York on January 19, charged with attempting to murder U.S. troops in Ghazni province in Afghanistan in 2008. The case against Dr. Siddiqui, 37, soon due to lack of Unraveling evidencPakistaanse neuroscientist Aafia Siddiqui on trial in Federal Hall in New York on January 19, charged with attempted murder of U.S. in the Afghan province of Ghazni in 2008. The case against Dr. Siddiqui, 37, is rapidly decay due to lack of evidence and testimony of witnesses hostility.

It is increasingly apparent that the costs of fabrication, shown in order to hide the fact that Siddiqui, along with her elder son, have been free in the notorious Bagram U.S. military prison in Afghanistan between 2003 and 2008, where they were tortured. The two younger children of Dr. Siddiqui is still missing.

According to the report given by the U.S. authorities, Aafia Siddiqui was arrested by Afghan security forces in July 2008 after she claimed in a list of U.S. targets for terrorist attack and found bomb making instructions, and various chemicals.

Despite these observations Siddiqui is charged with terrorism-related crimes. Instead, it is the defendant in court on charges captured with an automatic weapon and shot her Afghan and American bodyguards, when a group of FBI agents and U.S. military officers came to his collection. The most serious charge against her, is the use of firearms in the commission of a crime, the gun we are talking about American soldiers guns.

Siddiqui was shot twice in the stomach and barely survived the medics in Bagram air field was cut from her belly her belly button to remove the bullets. It was reported that part of her intestines must be removed to save her life.

The charges against strains credulity Siddiqui and hotly denied her family, her lawyers and human rights organizations, who all claim that they held in secret detention the United States, where they had been physically and sexually abused since she disappeared from the streets of Karachi in the spring of 2003 with her three children, then seven, five and six months.

German weekly Der Spiegel, but a few days before she disappeared, Affia Siddiqui had contact with her former professor, Robert Sekuler, at Brandeis University who are looking for work, complaining that there is no work in Pakistan, a woman of education background.

Dr. Siddiqui is a Pakistani national, who was educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Brandeis University. In July 2001 she and her husband at that time were investigated by the FBI on charges of collaborating with Islamic charities. After the events of September 11, 2001 couple returned to Pakistan at a time when hundreds of Pakistanis and other Muslims, were detained for questioning in the United States. The family lived in Karachi, where was Aafia Siddiqui worked at the Aga Khan University.

Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, Aafia Siddiqui and her children were abducted by Pakistani intelligence agents on his way to Karachi airport. Their whereabouts remain unknown Aafia Siddiqui and her eldest son, Ahmed, was detained in Afghanistan in July 2008, several years after their disappearance. While the Pakistani Interior Ministry, initially, it was confirmed that the abduction occurred, later claimed that he had made a mistake and said that Siddiqui is not in the Pakistani prisoners. This round was an attempt to conceal the involvement of Pakistani intelligence services in the issuance of the U.S. government of Afghanistan Siddiqui and her subsequent testing.

Aafia Siddiqui's sister, Dr. Fauzia Siddiqui, the press reported that she and her mother arrived in the United States in 2003 to meet the FBI, who claimed that Aafia Siddiqui should be released soon. In Pakistan, Siddiqui's family was repeatedly harassed and received numerous death threats from the dark forces in Pakistan's ruling elite. The family was ordered not in public professions of support Aafia and her three children.

Between 2003 and 2008, when the whereabouts of Siddiqui was still unknown, the U.S. stated that she worked on behalf of al-Qaeda. In May 2004 she was handed over by U.S. officials as one of the seven most wanted al-Qaeda refugees. The United States also erroneously claims that she was married to Ammar al-Baluchi, a nephew who allegedly Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, 'brains' of 9 / 11 attacks. Siddiqui claims that he was married to al-Baluchi was based solely on coercive statements by Muhammad, who had repeatedly tortured.

The U.S. military and the FBI has always denied that Siddiqui was in custody in the United States until his arrest in 2008. Aafia Siddiqui actually spent the years between 2003 and 2008 in the detention facility at Bagram Air Base, which many refer to it as the "Gray Lady of Bagram."

Around the same time, as it put the arrest, the British journalist Yvonne Ridley, was to draw attention to an unknown prisoner in prison in Bagram, known as prisoner number 650. In his book "enemy combatants", Moazzam Begg recalled heard the cries of a woman as she was tortured while in custody in the same institution. According to Ridley, in 2005, male prisoners at the facility were so concerned about her screams and cries that she staged a hunger strike which lasted six days.

When she was arrested in 2008, 11 years old, when her son Ahmed, an American citizen, who was on her side. Injured boy had been repatriated to Pakistan, where he now lives with his aunt, Dr. Fawzia Siddiqui. According to his aunt, Pakistani authorities allowed to communicate with the media Ahmed.

Appearance Siddiqui changed since 2002, according to her lawyers. She broke her nose, pale and very weak, weighing about 100 kg. When they arrived in the U.S., she suffers from severe trauma, according to her lawyers, who were outraged that she received first aid. Siddiqui is suffering excruciating pain from the wounds she suffered in Afghanistan and hung over her in a wheelchair when she arrived in court in August 2008.

Her trial was delayed when her lawyers argued that she was mentally unfit to participate in his defense. However, prosecutors have finally found mental health experts who claim that her condition seemed to escape punishment. Judge Richard Berman ruled that she was mentally fit for trial.

Limited media attention given to the process is remarkable, especially considering that Siddiqui had been listed as Top Al-Qaeda suspect. Boulevard Press, New York, where the trial received limited attention was of its debt for granted, dubbing it a cynical "Lady" Al-Qaeda. "The trial is being closely monitored in Pakistan, where many tests Siddiqui in a rage and led to protests in the country.

From the outset, it is doubtful whether the process is characterized by irregularities and the court went on his way to the prosecutors to meet. Íÿìà Pakistani journalist was granted press credentials to attend the opening statements Tuesday. The lawyers protested against the robust security measures to introduce during the trial, which obviously supports the idea that Siddiqui is a threat to the United States.

In clear violation of his rights, Judge Berman has repeatedly thrown Siddiqui from the courtroom for what he called her "flash". Spike tortured Siddiqui's claims of innocence and protest that they were tortured.

"Since I was unable to speak," she said in court. "If you are in a secret prison, tortured or your children were ... Give me credit, it is not a list of goals, New York. I never intended to bomb. You're lying."

This process is also characterized by contradictory testimony, which undermined the case against Siddiqui.

On the third day of the trial, Assistant Attorney SV Jenny Dabbs display multiple photos in the room where the prosecution's case there was shooting. However, Carl Rosatti, FBI firearms expert who examined the case, admitted Friday that he found "no shell casings or bullets or fragments of bullets, no evidence of guns [M-4 rifle, the soldier] fired. Only the shell Shell covered 9 -- milllimeter gun, who was shot Siddiqui. On the fourth day of the trial, an FBI agent, revealed that the FBI found no fingerprints Aafia Siddiqui at the M-4 rifles.

Ensign, who shot Siddiqui also took the position, saying the version of events created by the prosecution. He claimed that on the day he and his colleagues went to collect Siddiqui, she suddenly grabbed his gun and turned it over to U.S. troops after he opened fire with a 9-millimeter pistols.

When Siddiqui said: "I have never been shot, she dropped out of the hall before the end of the day.

The unnamed officer warrant, which came to the state through a stick, was given the opportunity to tell how he was injured as a result of the recent and quite confusing roads bombing in Afghanistan, the tears, as he did. Although this is completely irrelevant to the study, the wounds of soldiers used as part of the blatant attempts to influence a jury trial. Testimony, Judge Berman, which shows the fraudulent nature of the process.

Feeling that Siddiqui is very emotionally unstable, the plaintiffs moved to compel her to testify in the hope that they will testify against himself. Advocates argue that it is not mentally fit to testify in court. Again Berman right side of the prosecution.

Berman warns that Aafia Siddiqui was not allowed to talk about events prior to her arrest in July 2008. However, on Thursday Siddiqui repeatedly told the jury that it was held in secret prisons by the U.S. authorities, according to the Associated Press of Pakistan. She told jurors how she shot immediately after she peered through the curtains to find a way to salvation. She added that it would be absurd to suppose that the soldiers would leave the gun, where, as expected, the accused can get dangerous to him.

"It's crazy," she said. "It's ridiculous. I did not.

Responding to a question the U.S. attorney for the contents of his purse, which allegedly contain chemicals, bomb making instructions and a list of goals, the U.S., Siddiqui said: "I can not say that the bag was not mine, so I 'T must pass through everything." Siddiqui lawyers have argued bag and its contents have been planted evidence. Her lawyer, Elaine Whitfield Sharp Siddiqui said that was in 2008, that do in fact "good incriminating evidence."

"Of course, they found all these things on it. It was planted on her. This is the final victim of the American dark side," another of her lawyers have told the Associated Press in 2008.

Siddiqui told the jury that her children are constantly on the head, and she was disoriented at the time of her arrest in 2008.

On Friday, the prosecution called Gary Woodworth with the Braintree Rifle and Pistol Club in Massachusetts to testify. Woodworth Siddiqui said that was a 12-hour course in the gun at some point in the early 1990's. The Associated Press of Pakistan reported that Woodworth was sad, when the defense team wanted to know how it was possible for him to recall a particular man with two decades earlier, when hundreds of students. Woodworth admitted that he had no papers or documents proving its claim, asserting that it was well to remember faces.

In addition, on Friday, FBI Special Agent Bruce Kamerman showed that Siddiqui grabbed a machine gun from a fit of anger. But he seemed nervous, as one of the lawyers Siddiqui made handwritten notes in which there is no mention of a pistol grip.

Despite the clearly fictional character of the law for the prosecution, there is no guarantee of an acquittal.

Even if she is not guilty, the fate of two other children Aafia Siddiqui, Mariam and Suleman, remains unknown. Siddiqui said that she was detained in solitary confinement for five years, she was forced to listen endlessly recording her screams, terrified children. Her child, Suleman, according to her, immediately took her never to be seen. She said that her daughter Mariam, now revealed to her, but only as a dark figure in a letter opaque glass.

A terrible case of Aafia Siddiqui and her three children is just one example of the criminal and inhuman practices of U.S. imperialism and its allies, Pakistani bourgeoisie. Hundreds, if not thousands of Pakistanis were abducted by Pakistani intelligence and handed over to U.S. personnel deployed to Bagram, Guantanamo and other "black site" torture chambers around the world. Although the Pakistani government now asserts that he is doing his utmost to Siddiqui returned to Pakistan to bring his alleged efforts are nothing more than schade.e and disagrees with the testimony of witnesses.

More and more it becomes apparent that the charges are trumped-up charges, which were delivered to hide the fact that Siddiqui, along with her eldest son, was held without charges in the notorious U.S. military prison at Bagram in Afghanistan during the period between 2003 and 2008 where they were tortured. Two doctors. Siddiqui younger children are still missing.

According to the report according to U.S. authorities, Aafia Siddiqui was taken into custody of Afghan security forces in July 2008 after allegedly found a list of U.S. targets for terrorist acts, as well as bomb-making instructions, and various chemicals.

Despite these claims, Siddiqui is not charged with any terrorism. Instead, she is blamed for allegedly seized an automatic weapon and opened fire on Afghan and American invaders her, when a group VS officers and FBI agents arrived to collect it. The most serious charge against her use of a firearm in a felony gun on this issue will be the rifle U.S. troops.

Siddiqui was shot twice in the stomach and barely survived after doctors at Bagram Air Field had to make a cut from the breast bone of the navel to remove the bullets. It was reported that some of its insides have been removed to save her life.

The charges against strains credulity Siddiqui and were hotly denied her relatives, her lawyers and human rights organizations, all of whom argue that it was held in secret detention, where she was physically and sexually abused since she Off the streets of Karachi has disappeared in the spring of 2003 with her three children, then seven, five and six months.

In accordance with Germanwings weekly, Der Spiegel, just days before she disappeared, Affia Siddiqui got in touch with her former professor, Robert Sekuler, at Brandeis University in search of work, complained that there were no employment opportunities in Pakistan, the woman or her education .

Dr. Siddiqui is a Pakistani national, who was educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Brandeis University. In July 2001 she and her husband at the time were carefully studied by the FBI on charges of ties to Islamic charities. After the events of September 11, 2001 couple returned to Pakistan at a time when hundreds of Pakistanis and other Muslims were detained for questioning in the United States. The family lived in Karachi, where Aafia Siddiqui worked at the Aga Khan University.

According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, Aafia Siddiqui and her children were abducted by Pakistani intelligence agents on their way to the airport in Karachi. Their whereabouts remained unknown until Aafia Siddiqui and her eldest son, Ahmed, reportedly detained in Afghanistan in July 2008, several years after their disappearance. While the Pakistani Interior Ministry was initially confirmed that the abduction was a place of duties, he later claimed that he was mistaken, and said that Siddiqui was not in the Pakistani prisoners. This round was an attempt to hide the Pakistani intelligence services of involvement in the extradition to the U.S. government on Siddiqui in Afghanistan and its subsequent test.

Aafia Siddiqui's sister, Dr. Fauzia Siddiqui told the press that she and her mother were JOUR eyes in the U.S. in 2003 to meet with representatives of the FBI, who claimed that Aafia Siddiqui will soon be released. In Pakistan, Siddiqui's family have repeatedly harassed and received numerous death threats from the dark forces in Pakistan's ruling elite. The family was ordered not to make any public appeals in support of Aafia and her three children.

Between 2003 and 2008, when the whereabouts of Siddiqui was still unknown, the U.S. said she worked on behalf of al-Qaeda. In May 2004 she was engaged by U.S. officials as one of the seven "Most Wanted" Al-Qaeda fugitives. The United States also falsely claimed that she was married to Ammar al-Baluchi, who is reportedly a nephew of Khalid Sheikh

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