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Pakistani Intelligence blocked a prisoner swap to release Dr. Aafia Siddiqui - Yvonne Ridley

We must have Afia on humanitarian rights and because she is Pakistani.It is our right and it is responsibility of GOP to retrieve Afia without exchanging any mindset with potential to damage Pakistan.
We must continue to strive for Dr.Afia and make adjustment to balance relationship with US as well.
I pray to Allah(SWT) to punish every culprit who is behind this and I hope to see Dr.Afia safe and sound.

regards
 
We must have Afia on humanitarian rights and because she is Pakistani.It is our right and it is responsibility of GOP to retrieve Afia without exchanging any mindset with potential to damage Pakistan.
We must continue to strive for Dr.Afia and make adjustment to balance relationship with US as well.
I pray to Allah(SWT) to punish every culprit who is behind this and I hope to see Dr.Afia safe and sound.

regards
That's important to build our case on humanitarian grounds but up to so far none of the govts , starting with Musharraf's to the last one, has expressed any interest. Political and religious parties have also exhibited a mysterious silence and the same goes for the so called human right groups and candle mafia.

Regards,
WnP
 
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hmmm if the prisoner was afridi then no, he should be locked or at least not allowed to go to US. we need to get haqqani network US. to get afia we need to find another way but still we dont know the whole story.
 
Why would Afia be dead within two hours of arriving in Pakistan? She must have said every thing she knew, (if she knew anything) to the Americans. Secondly, it is reported that she has lost her mind because of torture, separation from her children and death of one child. Her photograph from jail testifies to her condition.
 
I have mixed feelings on this. As much as I want to see Siddiqui released, the journalist answers his own question really. She is a pawn. Why should ISI let themselves be emotionally blackmailed into releasing high profile prisoners for a civilian women who Americans falsely implicated and illegally arrested? This would set a precedent for others to do the same. It would be strategic suicide to swap her for anyone.

An intelligence agency under no circumstances can afford to appear weak and susceptible to emotional blackmail.

Don't lose sight of the fact that Americans in this situation are the ultimate evil and knowingly holding an innocent mother on cooked up and frankly ridiculous charges. They realise she is a pawn and this is plainly speaking depraved behaviour on their part, but I don't see anyone criticising them.

Get real folks. Only the US can release her. There would be far too many Aafia Siddiqui's if any Pakistani agency caves in.
 
Afia is a convicted member of Al-Qaeda. Why in your right mind would you want to exchange her for someone who allegedly helped kill the leader of Al Qaeda?

What kind of message would that send to the rest of the world.

Let's not forget, she's also a US Citizen so she's not really our responsibility. The US Govt has to apply its laws.

We just have to ensure Afridi is punished.
 
Afia is a convicted member of Al-Qaeda. Why in your right mind would you want to exchange her for someone who allegedly helped kill the leader of Al Qaeda?

What kind of message would that send to the rest of the world.

Let's not forget, she's also a US Citizen so she's not really our responsibility. The US Govt has to apply its laws.

We just have to ensure Afridi is punished.

Aero, you're trippin'.

She's a Pakistani at the end of the day, and we never leave ours behind. This zero sum game of expendables is fine when applied to men, but when it comes to women, you know every Pakistani does not accept such a way of thinking. She's practically a vegetable and suffered enough. If we don't show mercy, how will Allah swt ever show us any?
 
Bullshit story, a full presidential pardon means acceptance of guilt, She was not guilty of anything, at least not the attempted murder of US soldier, that story is pure bullshit.

An exchange between a Pakistani prisoner in America and a US soldier held captive by Afghans does not make any sense. What does Dr. Afia gives Taliban? What does ISI has to do with US soldier in Taliban Captivity?

To me it looks like a lame attempt to malign ISI.



Yvonne Ridley

May 29, 2018 at 10:12 am

There were strong rumours sweeping across Pakistan recently that Dr Aafia Siddiqui, a cause célèbre across the Muslim world, had died in the Texas jail where she is serving an 86-year prison sentence having been convicted in a US court of seven counts of the attempted murder of US soldiers. Before tens of thousands of Pakistanis had a chance to rally on the streets in protest, a consular official was quickly despatched to the jail and, after a two hour meeting with Dr Siddiqui, was able to confirm that the rumours weren’t true.

Having investigated the case around Dr Siddiqui for 15 years now, I feel deeply uncomfortable about the ongoing charades that continue to be played around her. I still believe that she is the victim of a gross miscarriage of justice; a pawn in a rotten game between certain sections of US intelligence and Pakistan’s own spy agency, the ISI.

The time has now come to end my silence over this affair. I can reveal that I was literally days away from getting Dr Siddiqui released from Carswell Prison in Fort Worth with a full US Presidential pardon. She was to be exchanged for Robert “Bowe” Bergdahl, an American soldier who was held captive from June 2009 to May 2014 by the Taliban.

After being approached by senior members of the Taliban Shura (consultative council) while I was visiting the region in 2013, I was told that it might be possible to exchange Bergdahl for the Pakistan-born doctor and mother-of-three. I immediately made contact with US military intelligence, because I knew that if anyone was going to take me seriously it would be the US Army, which has a proud boast of “never leaving any soldier behind”. My instincts served me well, and I was soon put in contact with a senior military officer well versed in hostage negotiations.

Over a period of months and subsequent visits to the men who once held me captive, a deal was formulated. It involved no money, just a straightforward swap; Siddiqui for Bergdahl.

I had not informed anyone in Pakistan of what I was attempting because, quite frankly, many of the politicians I’ve encountered there are untrustworthy and I knew that there would be elements within the country’s intelligence network that would resist such a move. As such, I began making plans to bring Dr Aafia from a drop point in Afghanistan and over the border through the Khyber Pass, where we could then hold a press conference and make the announcement of her freedom.

The exchange with Bergdahl was to have been be done simultaneously. The final request made to me was a “proof of life” video showing the Americans that the soldier was still alive, and this was agreed by his captors.

When I returned for yet another clandestine meeting with the Taliban officials, though, they looked downcast and nervous. Through a translator I was told: “Dr Aafia is off the table. Maybe there’s someone else we can trade?” I was shocked and asked why, but very little information was given, which then prompted me to throw several insults questioning their honour and Islamic duty to try to free prisoners.

This was a risky thing to do because no one from my family, friends or colleagues knew where I was or who I was talking to; or, indeed, any of the details of my many trips to Pakistan and Afghanistan. However, as you can imagine, having spent so much time and getting so far in negotiations I was frustrated, even though I tried to keep a lid on the rage burning inside me.

Finally, out of the silence came the Taliban’s answer; it still shocks me today. The ISI had stumbled across our plans during one of their regular meetings with the Afghan Taliban, who were informed in no uncertain terms that Aafia Siddiqui must not be released; if she was returned to Pakistan, stressed the ISI officers, she’d most likely be dead within two days. I asked why, as Afghans, they were taking any notice of a Pakistani spy agency and questioned why Mullah Omar would have entered into such a dishonourable deal. Little did I know that the Taliban’s spiritual leader had, in fact, died some months earlier and his death would not be announced in public for another year.

After some discussion amongst themselves, the translator responded: “Hundreds of our soldiers have been injured in battles and the ISI has made arrangements to take care of them in Pakistan. Without their help and support we would be really struggling. We need them. When we stood up to America and refused to hand over Osama [Bin Laden] we had a country. We never wanted a war with the Americans, they brought the war to us. Until we regain our country we are not in the same position of strength as we were in 2001. Surely you must understand that?”

I got up and left with my guide, and have not met with the Taliban since.

As soon as I was able to, I informed my US contact that the deal was off. Naturally there was huge disappointment and then surprise when I explained why. That disappointment turned to anger when it transpired that the US State Department had jumped in and offered five senior Taliban commanders in exchange for the American soldier.

Those key members of the Taliban are now living in Qatar. I have been reliably informed that they would have refused to leave Guantanamo Bay, where they were being held, had they thought that Dr Siddiqui could be released instead of them.
I can tell you that while there was much joy to have Bergdahl back on home ground, there was also anger in the Pentagon that it had cost the US so dearly when a prisoner swap with Dr Siddiqui could have gone ahead.

What I have learned from all of this is that Dr Aafia Siddiqui would be free now if she was not a Pakistani citizen. Despite all the demonstrations and protests in Pakistan — and tears shed for the so-called “Daughter of the Nation” — she is not going home. Astonishingly, not one single official request has ever been made to the US authorities by the government in Islamabad to have her released.

Aafia will thus continue to be a symbol of everything that is wrong with George W Bush’s never-ending War on Terror; a pawn in a vile game being played out by Pakistan’s ISI and others. She will also be a rallying point for every would-be jihadi group from East to West as long as she is being held in that prison in Texas.

I’ve spoken to several Pakistani diplomats in recent years about Dr Siddiqui, telling them that if their Prime Ministers and Presidents are really sincere about wanting to bring her home then all they have to do is pick up the phone to Washington and organise a swap with Dr Shakil Afridi. He is the man, you may recall, who was jailed in Pakistan for his part in helping US forces hunt down and kill Osama Bin Laden.

Afridi was accused of treason and jailed after running a fake vaccine programme which helped the CIA to confirm that the Al-Qaida leader was indeed hiding with his family in the city of Abbottabad. Samples taken are said to have paved the way for the helicopter-led US Navy Seal raid on the compound where he lived.

Dr Afridi has recently been transferred to Adiala Prison near Islamabad, and there are more rumours in circulation that a deal has been reached with the US and he will soon be released. Sadly there will be no exchange with Dr Aafia Siddiqui, a woman who, in my view, continues to be denied justice thanks in large part to Pakistan’s ISI intelligence agency. It is hard to find the words to express how shameful this state of affairs really is.

Source:
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/2...a-prisoner-swap-to-release-dr-aafia-siddiqui/
 
What she was doing in Afghanistan?
Why she was married to Al Qaida big name?
Why only she was arrested not others around her?

Can we just end this bullshit that she is Pakistani so we need to bring her back? Hakeem Ullah Mehsud was a Pakistani too, so was Malik Ishaq so was Dr Usman so are thousands who were killed in military operations. A terrorist is a terrorist and we should not own terrorists. Period
 
We don't know much about Aafia. How did she end up in Afghanistan? What was she doing there? How did she get caught?

Yes, she is a Pakistani and of course we would love to have her released. Great injustice has been done to her. Nevertheless, we also need answers to many questions.

We are not being told even quarter of the real story.

We know quite a lot about her abduction from karachi and transport/route to Afghanistan. It's even easier , just go and talk to her and collect the information. Pakistani officials haven't bothered to do this and HR organisations have not been given access.

Unfortunately she got got caught up in dirty in Politics and a nasty web of people and agencies. She was probably asked to spy by one or another and refused and then made an example of. Her children were innocent in all this and were not spared either. One child, I believe, is still missing.

Yvonne Ridley is a reliable witness and source of information and was the first to publicise the imprisonment of Aafia. It's astonishing to see how easily the Americans negotiate the extrication of their guilty citizens but Pakistanis can't or are not bothered to negotiate a mother of 3 who has been jailed on very dubious evidence.
 

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