A New York jury has convicted Aafia Siddiqui of shooting at American soldiers and FBI agents in Afghanistan during her arrest in 2008. The judge, the jury and the entire proceedings focused narrowly on shooting charges, and there was no discussion of how the accused ended up in Afghanistan.
The question still remains as to where has Aafia Siddiqui been since her disappearance from Karachi in 2003 till the alleged shooting during her arrest in Afghanistan in 2008?
A Harper magazine story from last November, 2009 issue has a detailed report on Aafia Siddiqui's ordeal from 2003 to the start of her trial in 2009. It has multiple conflicting accounts from many sources including Pakistani officials and Aafia's family.
The Harper reporter Petra Bartosiewicz explains that "The charges against her stem solely from the shooting incident itself, not from any alleged act of terrorism. The prosecutors provide no explanation for how a scientist, mother, and wife came to be charged as a dangerous felon. Nor do they account for her missing years, or her two other children, who still are missing. What is known is that the United States wanted her in 2003, and it wanted her again in 2008, and now no one can explain why."
Haq's Musings: Has Justice Been Served in Afia Siddiqui's Conviction?
Haq's Musings: Is Aafia Siddiqui an Innocent Victim, or Dangerous Terrorist?
The question still remains as to where has Aafia Siddiqui been since her disappearance from Karachi in 2003 till the alleged shooting during her arrest in Afghanistan in 2008?
A Harper magazine story from last November, 2009 issue has a detailed report on Aafia Siddiqui's ordeal from 2003 to the start of her trial in 2009. It has multiple conflicting accounts from many sources including Pakistani officials and Aafia's family.
The Harper reporter Petra Bartosiewicz explains that "The charges against her stem solely from the shooting incident itself, not from any alleged act of terrorism. The prosecutors provide no explanation for how a scientist, mother, and wife came to be charged as a dangerous felon. Nor do they account for her missing years, or her two other children, who still are missing. What is known is that the United States wanted her in 2003, and it wanted her again in 2008, and now no one can explain why."
Haq's Musings: Has Justice Been Served in Afia Siddiqui's Conviction?
Haq's Musings: Is Aafia Siddiqui an Innocent Victim, or Dangerous Terrorist?