Question
Aafiya Siddique's case
yes, its true the trial of Aafia Siddiqui, the most wanted women in the WOT,begins in in Manhattan. Siddiqui, 37, an MIT-educated neuroscientist and suspected al-Qaeda operative, is charged with attempted murder for allegedly shooting at a group of U.S. soldiers and FBI agents in Afghanistan during her captivity.
Charges on Ms Siddique
She is charged also of having relations with the extremists bodies of Afghanistan, who are working in America and else where in the world.
Ms Siddique's case is difficult
The factors that have made Ms siddique's case so difficult are that for over a decade Ms Siddiqui lived and studied in the U.S., but shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks she was linked by law enforcement to a number of terrorism suspects. Among them is Majid Khan, a former resident of Baltimore, who was allegedly tasked by 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to plan terrorist attacks in the U.S.
Siddiqui has done little to clarify the myste which is also confusing for the jurry. After resurfacing in Ghazni in 2008, she gave conflicting accounts of her absence during this period. According to court records filed by the government, she allegedly told FBI agents who questioned her in Afghanistan that she was the wife of Ammar al-Baluchi, a nephew of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,.Mr Abdul Aziz Ali also known as Ammar al-Baluchi who is now one of the five accused 9/11 plotters expected to face trial in the same courthouse as Siddiqui.
Aafiya's conflicting statements
She has also alternately claimed that she was kidnapped by U.S. intelligence, kidnapped by Pakistani intelligence, and that she herself was working as an agent for Pakistani intelligence. She has shed little light on the whereabouts of two of her children who remain missing.
Her mental condition
Adding to the confusion are questions over Siddiqui's mental state, which psychiatrists who examined her said could be the result of posttraumatic stress. She was initially nd trial last year, a decision that was reversed after she underwent an extensive psychological evaluation at a federal prison in Carswell, Texas where psychiatrists were divided over whether she was delusional and possibly psychotic, or merely faking her symptoms.
How Siddique came in custody?
In 2003 Khan was picked up by Pakistani intelligence, who eventually handed him over to the CIA. Just two weeks later the FBI issued an urgent alert seeking Siddiqui for questioning. But Siddiqui, who by then had moved back to her native Pakistan, had vanished without a trace. Khan, who is now a high-value detainee at Guantnamo Bay, has never been formally charged with any crime.
Aafiya Siddique's situation in Pakistan
Human-rights groups, however, believe Siddiqui is no extremist and that she, along with her three young children (two of whom are American-born), was illegally detained and interrogated by Pakistani intelligence, likely at the behest of the U.S. In 2007 she was named a missing person in a briefing paper on U.S. responsibility for what is called "enforced disappearances" that was authored by six leading human-rights groups, including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International.
Conclusion
But whatever the case maybe, the pakistani authorities are doing very little for the release of Aafiya Siddique, which has given rise to many riots and protests in Pakistan against the government officials, on the other hand the government claims that it is not responsible for handing over the lady to the Americans, it was done during the Musharraf regime and that now they cant do anything for it
nothing can be done................we are a dead nation........the tag of this question is very rightly placed we are shameless nation....and coward nation
May God kill you a dogs death..........Musharraf!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
What if this happens to you