The Pakistani state can commute Siddiqui’s sentence and grant her pardon, but it would not be able to open a judicial review to probe the circumstances that led to her imprisonment in the US. Siddiqui’s trial has spawned a caseload of conspiracy theories; she has been accused of everything from the purchasing of diamonds in Liberia to financing the al Qaeda war to the facilitation of al Qaeda operatives in the US. She has been varyingly called the ‘Mata Hari of al Qaeda’, ‘grey lady of Bagram’ and ‘daughter of the Pakistani nation’ by her opponents and supporters.
After her sentencing in 2010, mainstream political parties, like the PML-N and the PTI, along with many right-wing parties, protested and demanded her release. Siddiqui appeals to moderate Muslims — who are moderate in the sense that they believe in the validity of representative democracy and provision of modern secular education by the state. Her case also resonates with jihadists of different stripes, particularly the Taliban, who, albeit, are against constitutional democracy, secular education and fundamental human rights.
It is because an important constituent of discourse for both groups is anti-Americanism — an opposition to the alleged US neo-imperialism and its foreign policy agenda — that they view Siddiqui as an ‘intellectual’, speaking for Islam against the monolith of US foreign policy. Thus, she is a ‘prisoner of conscience’ for both groups. However, if we trace Siddiqui’s trajectory from the MIT campus to Kabul, it is riddled with internal inconsistencies, with the truth remaining hidden.
Should Pakistan sign a prisoner swap agreement with the US to transfer Siddiqui to Pakistan? Yes, she should be brought to Pakistan if the government can investigate her alleged link to suspected terrorists. Was Siddiqui facilitating al Qaeda operatives under the guise of charity work in Pakistan; where did she stay during her period of disappearance between 2003 and 2008; how did she end up in Ghazni; why was her daughter separated from her and what happened to her third child? Unless these questions are probed, the transfer of Siddiqui to Pakistan and commutation of her sentence would serve to whet the militant discourse by establishing that she had been wronged and was a ‘victim’. It is important to understand that the militant discourse thrives on the notion of victimhood. Muslims are portrayed as ‘victims’ of Jewish-American or European conspiracies.
In short, Siddiqui should be brought back to Pakistan if we can judge the facts of her case transparently. Only the search for truth can help us escape the jihadist narrative of ‘victim’ and ‘perpetrator’, and place the issues plaguing Pakistan in a historical context, and drive us to find solutions for them.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 24th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (49)
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I followed very closely about Aafia case. First of all she never punished as a Al-Qaeda terrorist and second she is 100% Pakistani citizen and she illegally abducted from Pakistan, transferred to Afghanistan planted to accuse her attacking US soldiers and illegally sent her for trial in US soil. She was punished without getting any proven evidence. All other strange theories are stupid Google search with no reliable background. What a funny world. She should be back to her family and kids enough drama. Nas
@Mumtaz Piracha: Dear Muntaz Piracha, If I am reading your missive correctly you are, unlike most others, introducing a non-emotional, even handed, diplomatic approach into finding ways for Dr. Aafia Siddiqui's return to Pakistan without pointing out inconsistencies, which may or may not, exist in the whole saga of her incarceration and eventual trial in America. I do not know to what extent you can influence the various parities who are involved in Dr. Siddiqui's return and eventual release, but every little bit helps. With that in mind, and for what it is worth, I offer my general compliance with your efforts to secure her safe return. Keep up the good work.
@Mumtaz Piracha: After her return to Pakistan I hope you will offer her co-chairwomen-ship in your organization to bring more good governance and healthy mindset in your approach towards these types of outfits.
The US has done what it wanted to do. Whether the trial was fair or not and whether the 86 years' sentence was justifiable are not are no longer relevant. Under the Sindh High Court directive dated 16 May 2013, the federal government has been ordered to repatriate Dr Aafia Siddiqui under any of the two international conventions mentioned by the author or a bilateral agreement. Deputy Advocate General acceded to the plea of the petitioner's attorney.
The ball is now in the court of the federal government. The Interior Minister did constitute a committee to examine the case and put its recommendations. The committee has reportedly made 10 recommendations which are to be placed in the next cabinet meeting.
Mian Nawaz Sharif and Imran Khan are on record having made a commitment to bring back Dr Aafia Siddiqui once they are in power. So, the time has come for them to honour their commitment. US is ready to repartiate Dr Aafia Siddiqui once any of the international conventions or the bilateral agreement are signed.
Mumtaz A. Piracha Founder/Chairman Good Governance Forum www.goodgovernanceforum.com
@Concerned: Dear Concerned, Thank you for your missive, although all it did was show your extraordinary bias in regard to the ongoing Dr. Siddiqui saga. Almost everything you wrote was based on hearsay and innuendo, designed to confuse, and ensure that President Obama and the CIA will be very pleased with you. I previously wrote the facts very simply, but you chose to ignore them. The facts basically are that Dr. Siddiqui was illegally picked up. From experience we know that her American interrogators would have drugged and tortured her. They could not find any evidence of terrorism so they went for a lesser charge of so called deadly assault, shot her, severely damaged internal organs, and shipped her to New York for an American show trial, which Stalin from the old days of Russia would have been proud of. I am not aware of Dr. Siddiqui’s current health situation, but would make an even money bet that she has been completely traumatised by her brutal treatment , over several years , which would have induced previously, at the New York trial, and currently, severe psychiatric and physical trauma. This was completely ignored by Judge Berman, who obviously like you, is completely devoid of empathy and compassion. You may say that Dr. Siddiqui received medical attention. However, I would be very concerned if my loved ones received medical care from the type of personnel engaged by US type Gulags. I do not know how you came up with the fact that returning Dr. Siddiqui to Pakistan will be associated with the truth, or lack of it, but can she be any worse than the people in Washington who are constantly found to be engaging in mistruths? However, that is not why I think she should be returned to Pakistan. Dr. Siddiqui was given a political trial. She has been incarcerated on very unsafe legal grounds, but if returned to Pakistan, left alone by brutal people in US intelligence, and cared for carefully, just maybe her health will return. To conclude, you also said that you wish comments had links to information. It would be pointless. You do not appear to be able to make an accurate evaluation of the truth. Without naming America you appear to be suggesting that if comments do not agree with American policy they cannot be true, or at the very least you appear to be defending or favoring things American, which are indefensible.
Nicely Articulated !!
Keep dreaming. Has it not gotten through your head that your questions are just getting ignored by now? You have nothing of value to trade, you've never really been a friend and no favors are owed. Furthermore, your understanding of the law is pretty terrible and from that little snippet under your name "We deserve to know!" No, you don't deserve to know anything. She wasn't Pakistani and she didn't try killing Pakistanis. Don't act like we answer to you in the slightest.
You all should be ashamed of yourselves as Muslims its our duty to look after our Muslim sister. Bring afia siddique back.
@kaalchakra: Really? You trust a justice system where defendant is not read his rights, does not have a right to a lawyer, does not have a right to have the charges translated to him in a language he understands, does not have a right to appeal. BUT you do not trust a justice system where all these privileges and an open trial by jury is available.
When you say 'WE' who exactly did you have in mind? Are you sure the family members of those Pakistanis who were beheaded agree with you?
The question is why should we bring her back. What is the compulsion and what purpose will it serve. The author is pretending to be a moderate by suggesting conditions of Afia's return.
All those who are talking against Afia siddiqui, I just want to say them that you people should die of shame. That's how you would behave to your own sisters when they will be in such a bad conditions??? You guys are not human. You people are not Muslims. If you don't know the truth then don't poke your nose in all this humanity matter.
I have commented ONLY ONCE. The second comment under my name ' Please, please keep Afia were she is safely lodged.......................... ' is not my comment. Altough the substance is not something I would disagree with, but the fact remains that it is not my comment.
@Concerned:
Everybody discussing that system good or bad for us. We need to have our own functional system of justice and law enforcement . If terrorism can be finished off by Aafia's s stay in USA, let her stay there.
dear very nice and concise article but my question are;- 1. from where afia sadiqqi is arrested ? 2. why she was divorced by his first husband ? 3. who was his 2nd husband ?
Don't we have enough terrorists? Please post a bill board outside our all embassies in the world House Full. Why this issue is not considered as closed is worrisome for all peace loving citizens.
Gp65
There is no comparison between this case and the cases of the criminals who have been and are regularly beheaded in Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia has a justice system we all trust and respect.
Pakistan is a poor country living on alms and zakat which are spirited away by the corrupt rulers. Why does it want to spend alms and zakat for release of a US national. Corrupt rulers take will be accordingly reduced. Let her stay in her country.
@Mohibullah Khan: Yes and I understand their is a video of President Obama walking on water..
The US prosecutors have produced a video showing Dr.Aafia trying to kill a soldier with a gun in an Afghan military camp. She also accepted the charge during the trial though pleaded not guilty initially. As Pakistani expatriates, we followed the trial and convinced that justice has been done in this case.
@ivan:
She is not US citizen
the writer still doesn't know who is Afia!!!! Kings College - Public Policy another world it seems!
Question:
Is she a citizen of US? I have never seen a categorical answer from GOP or her family.
@Anas Abbas:
She's a Pakistani citizen who was arrested in Afghanistan by Afghan authorities who believed she was planning terrorist activities. She grabbed a weapon and tried to shoot an American who was interviewing her. She was legally extradited to the USA where she was charged with attempted murder, provided a $2 million legal defense team, given a public trial where she was found guilty and sentenced to a long prison term. She maybe a terrorist but she has never been charged or convicted of that crime. Bottom line - she's going to sit in an American jail for a very long time and the American's are not considering releasing Aafia to anybody. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aafia_Siddiqui
I do not think I have read so much arrant nonsense since I first started reading ET. I cannot find any evidence to suggest that Dr. A. Siddiui is American, and there certainly is no evidence to suggest that she has carried out terrorist activity. All we have is a few low functioning guards in a US torture camp who have complained, without providing any evidence, that Dr. Siddiqui attempted to attack them, and for this she was sentenced to 86 years in prison. All that Sameer Rashid, and most of the subsequent contributors, have done is write confusing nonsense designed to obfuscate the problem. Most international jurists have indicated that Dr. Siddiqui's American trial was a travesty of justice. Why don't you guys give Dr. Siddiqui a break and stop ranting about matters for which you have no evidence. All we have is US hearsay spread by agencies such as the CIA, and everybody with an IQ over 30 knows that America and the truth do not go together, particularly on the international level.
Please, please. Keep Afiai where she is safely lodged. We are already self sufficient, even after exporting some, in terrorists. We don't need one more.
Keep Aafia outside. We have USA to nab Osama and hold Aafia. Why bother with terrorists
@kalchkra @truthbetold
Instead of evaluating the merit of an argument, an attempt has been made to look at it from mental frames of 'anti-pakistani' or 'pro-terrorist.' Unless we get rid of these mental frames, we'll not be able to generate debate on important issues. If you disagree, give arguments, but don't vilify those who write as unpatriotic or sympathiser of terrorists.
@Imtaz Gul After losing 40,000 precious lives, isn't it time to reform our institutions?
@truthbetold
A typical Pakistani response. If you disagree with the opinion, call the author an agent or proxy for some force. Kudos
@ Mirza
You have stated the effects but not mentioned the cause. Why do Pakistanis support Muslim causes? It is promoted as official policy. Look at history books, politics of our dictators, religious parties and semi-religious parties.To break with this thinking, we need to bring things out of closet. This would stop weaving of conspiracies. At least, one conspiracy that Muslims are being victimized everywhere.
@Parvez
Academic studies give insights from real life, so there is nothing bad in being academic. We need to have truth and reconciliation Commission to find out truth. Everything gets brushed under the carpet in Pakistan.
The Pakistani authorities should investigate the author for possible links to terrorism. Why is she taking so much effort to bring a convicted terrorist back to Pakistan?
No Mame, you are wrong in your assertion that Muslims think that they are victims , no, we don't consider ourselves as victims. If the militants think or project that they are victims then let them think and who cares what they think, they are the ones who are victimizing the whole nation of Pakistan, just ask the mothers, fathers, sisters, sons, daughters and brothers of those whose loved ones has been victimized senselessly. I think she should remain in the US because she is the citizen of US just like me and if we violate the laws of our adapted country then we should be punished where we belong and not be sending us to Pakistan. She has already confessed to belong to the organizations which are detrimental and lethal to the State of Pakistan. Personally I have opposed the US interventions around the wold and still speaks out openly what is going on in Afghanistan and FATA but you won't find me going to Afghanistan to stir up trouble and picking up arms. The most prudent way for her would have been to lobby the congress like the rest of us do and did , we did help repeal the Pressler Amendment which was against Pakistan. I do think that excessive punishment has been given to her but sending her to Pakistan and freeing her there is just not helpful for Pakistanis. Pakistan already has too many people like her and they don't need another one to come in and create more problems. And above all she is the citizen of the US and she changed her citizenship with out any compulsion. Let the Americans pay for her up keep.By the way some of us many not be up to the par with her intellectually but we manage our protest peacefully. Tariq Ali is another fire brand but in his defense I would say that he has not taken up arms and goes around the world fighting the Americans or any one else but he has written books and delivers lectures even here in the US and has chastised the Bush Administration for going into Iraq, it seems he is more effective in his way than she ever was. Ali was very effective going around the campuses and saying things which were true about the heavy handedness of the Americans around the world specially in the third world countries. I never heard of her before she was captured in Afghanistan but certainly has been hearing about Ali since Ayub Khan's time when he was denied entry to Pakistan. So please don't confuse the issue here and let her reap what she sowed, she did not even care for her own family and neglected her family for the sake of what. What has she ever done for Islam or Muslims except give us such a heart burn.
Completely agree. Bring Afia back. In Pakistan, all facts can be judged openly and with complete transparency. The justice system is strong and fair. After all facts have been judged she can be exonerated just like Hafiz Saeed etc. These people are representatives of god and should be free from any prosecution.
and make her a heroine?
@Mirza:
you are absolutely right.
@Calrity I meant.. What IF, we don’t like what we find? ..p ET Thank for allowing the correction. PS: Mr. Mirza has the Clarity. ..p
@Parvez @ Mirza @ Anas Abbas
Being transparent in dealings, with terrorists or otherwise can dent jihadist rhetoric.
This reads very academic and distanced from reality. With our ability to mess up matters and allow extremists to dictate the narrative...............we need Afia like we need a hole in the head.
@ Anas Abbas
If Aafia married nephew of Khalid Sheikh, does it make her a terrorist? By this logic all wives of Osama bin Laden are also terrorists.
Well very apt. What is we don't like what we find? ..p
One fails to understand why are some Pakistanis so much interested in the fate of one foreign woman? There are dozens and dozens of Muslim countries from S. Arabia to Indonesia but only Pakistani hearts are aching for this self confessed jihadist. Whether they are Burmese Muslims or fanatic terrorists only Pakistanis shout the loudest and make it a personal issue as we do not have any problems of our own. Why are Bangladeshi Muslims not worried and vocal about their next door neighbors in Burma? Why have we assumed the monopoly and responsibility of all the problems of the world? The people who are not blind to the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent Muslims in Pakistan at the hands of fanatic, extremist terrorists are the loudest in support of Afia and her release. BTW, what has Afia ever done to serve Pakistan?
@kalchakra
Do u think states reveal everything to their citizens? Does India come clean on all aspects? You are simply naive.
There is a not-too-subtle anti-Pakistani bias in this blog. Why should anyone even assume that Pakistani state has any interest in hiding anything, or will not do everything it can to find out things it does not know?
Aafia is a terrorist and an american national. We already have an overload of militants http://aacounterterror.wordpress.com/aafia-siddiqui-vs-jews-zarina-mari-shazia-khalid-and-others/