
- Post-9/11, the "war on terror" has been a jihad     against Islam, the  colonizers v. the colonized, or what Edward Said  called     "the  familiar (America, Europe, us) and the strange (the Orient,     East,  them)." Dr. Aafia Siddiqui is one of its most tragic,  aggrieved,      and ravaged victims. Her ordeal continues horrifically.     
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- Boston Magazine's Katherine Oxment asked:  "Who's     afraid of Aafia  Siddiqui? She went to MIT and Brandeis, married a  (physician,     lived  in Boston), cared for her children....raised money for   charities....did     other volunteer work, hosted play groups in her  apartment, (is)  deeply     religious....distribute(d) Korans to inmates  in area prisons," and     did nothing out of the ordinary. (She) "was a  normal woman living     a normal American life. Until the FBI called  her a terrorist....a  high-profile     Al Qaeda operative," but we've  seen these charges before, and each     time they were bogus. They're  egregiously so against Aafia - a  woman guilty     only of being Muslim  at the wrong time in America or elsewhere if  you're     on Washington's  target list.     
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- Against her and others, no evidence exists  so prosecutors     invent  it. Most (or key parts) is kept classified, unavailable to  the      defense, and trials are judicial equivalents of circuses. Witnesses   are     enlisted, pressured, coerced, and/or bought off to cooperate.   Proceedings     are carefully orchestrated. Due process is effectively  denied, and  juries     are intimidated to convict the innocent for  political advantage.     
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- The dominant media cooperate. Using  information from     Washington  Post writer, Douglas Farah, and other sources, writer  Lindsey     Worth  of FMS, Inc. referred to "the mysterious Aafia   Siddiqui....allegedly     Al Qaeda's only female leader" in connecting  her to "the Al     Queda diamond operation" in West Africa.     
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- The Times Online calls Aafia "Al-Qaeda  woman,"     and for ABC News  she's "Mata Hari" in a lengthy report featuring     unsubstantiated  charges against her, including:     
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- -- possessing detailed radiological,  chemical and biological      information, including possessing a liter of cyanide and   instructions     for a "dirty bomb;"      
- -- more documents for a mass casualty  attack;      
- -- a list of New York targets, including  the Statue of     Liberty,  Brooklyn Bridge, Empire State Building, Wall Street, and  the     animal  disease center on Plum Island;      
- -- terrorist recruiting;     
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- -- possessing excerpts from "The  Anarchist's Arsenal;"     
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- -- "documents detailing US military  assets;"     
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- -- methods of attack by reconnaissance  drones, underwater     bombs and  gliders; and     
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- -- a thumb (or flash) drive packed with  emails detailing     "specific  cells" and planned attacks to carry out.     
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- According to the FBI, she is, or was when  captured, a     potential  "treasure trove" of information on terrorist supporters,      sympathizers or sleepers in America and overseas. CIA officer John   Kiriakou     said she's "the most significant capture in five years,"  and     an unnamed counterterrorism official called her "a very  dangerous     person, no doubt about it."     
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- For Kiriakou, she's a "radical" involved in     planning "a wide  variety of different operations (perhaps with  WMDs),"     including a  "possible attempt on the life of the President."     Unnamed sources  from three federal agencies accused her of an "ill     conceived" and  perhaps amateurish plot to "kill all living US     presidents,"  including Jimmy Carter by poisoning.     
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- By marriage to his nephew, she's also  reputedly linked     to Khalid  Sheikh Mohammed, the "principal architect of the 9/11  attacks,"      according to the 9/11 Commission. He reportedly "gave her up"     after  capture on March 1, 2003, and shortly thereafter she and her   children     disappeared.     
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- The DOJ also connects her to Adnan El  Shukrijumah, another      suspected Al Qaeda member "involved in terrorist planning with   senior     Al Qaeda leaders overseas and across America," according to  John     Ashcroft.     
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- Aafia's friends and family deny all  charges. They call     her an  innocent victim of US persecution, and an especially  egregious     one  for being ravaged in detention. One supporter (Abu Sabaya) said   this     about the woman he knew:     
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- "I want you to come to know of the concern  and dedication     that this  woman had for Islam as described by those who knew her - a       dedication that was manifested by way of actions that were very   simple     and easy, yet seldom carried out by those who are able.     
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- Those who knew Aafia recall that she was a  very small,     quiet,  polite, and shy woman who was barely noticeable in a  gathering.      However....she would say what (was) needed" when necessary.     
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- While at MIT, she organized drives to  deliver Korans     and other  Islamic literature to Muslims in local prisons. She was  also      dedicated to Islam on campus where fellow students described her as   soft-spoken,     studious, religious, but not extremist or  fundamentalist. She wrote  three     instructional guides on the faith.  More as well on how to run a  daw'ah     table to provide religious  information and training for da'iyas  (callers     to Islam). She wrote:     
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- "Imagine our humble, but sincere daw'ah  effort turning     into a major  daw'ah movement in this country! Just imagine it!  And  us,     reaping  the reward of everyone who accepts Islam throught this  movement      (for) years to come. Think and plan big. May Allah give this   strength     and sincerity to us so that our humble effort continues  and expands  until     America becomes a Muslim land."     
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- Aafia taught local Muslim children on  Sundays, but her     greatest  passion was to help oppressed Muslims worldwide. She spoke   publicly,     sent emails, gave slideshow presentations, and raised  donations  while     a student and caring for three young children at home.     
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- Because of her faith, activism, and passion  for the oppressed,     it's  little wonder she was targeted and why Assistant US Attorney   Christopher     LaVigne called her "a high security risk" despite no  evidence     to prove it.     
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- Her Background and What Happened     
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- Aafia is a Pakistani national with degrees  from MIT and     a doctorate  in neurocognitive science from Brandeis. Despite false  media      reports, she's not a microbiologist, geneticist or neurologist. Nor   did     her training provide expertise for WMD terrorism. As her  lawyer,  Elaine     Whitfeld Sharp, explains:     
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- The prosecution claimed "that Aafia was  involved     in biochemical  warfare. She wasn't taking brain cells and testing  how     they reacted  to gases. But there's all this news in the media about  the     changing  face of Al Qaeda, the neurobiology scare, and now we've  got this      MIT graduate with a Brandeis Ph.D. who's cooking up all these   viruses."     
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- Boston Magazine writer Katherine Ozment  explained what     Aafia "was  actually cooking up" - the simple concept that people     learn by  imitation. To study it, "she devised a computer program     and used  adult volunteers, who came to her office and watched  various      objects move randomly across the screen, then reproduced what they   recalled.     The point was to see how well they retained the  information having  seen     in on the screen."     
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- Brandeis professor of cognitive science  Paul DiZio laughed     about  how this could apply to terrorism. "I can't see how it can     be  applied to anything. It's not applied work. It didn't have a   medical     aspect to it. And, as a computer expert, she was competent.  But you  know,     calling her a mastermind or something (is ludicrous)  - I never saw  any     evidence."     
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- She and her husband (a medical resident at  the time at     Brigham and  Women's Hospital) used their apartment for a 1999  nonprofit      organization they began called the Institute of Islamic Research   and     Teaching. It had nothing to do with terrorism. According to the   neighborhood     Mosque's Imam, Abdullah Faruuq: "What I know of  (Aafia) is that she     was living here in America, and her  organization was for sharing  Islamic     information with the American  people."     
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- Faruuq was impressed with her dedication.  "Aafia     was an American  girl and a good sister." She also wanted her  husband     to use his  medical skills to help the less fortunate. Despite her  devout      faith, "there was nothing radical about Siddiqui. She just seemed      like a very kind person."     
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- She's also a mother of three, and a victim  of extreme     viciousness  in detention. According to her mother, Ismet, she "left     the family  home in Gulshan-e-lqbal in a taxi on March 30 to catch a  flight     for  Rawalpindi, but never reached the airport." Inside sources  claim      she was picked up by intelligence agents en route, and initial   reports     suggest then handed over to the FBI.     
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- She was missing for over a year when the  agency posted     her  photographs on its web site. Shortly afterward, a story was  leaked      about her involvement in the 2001 Liberian diamond trade with her   as     an Al Qaeda operative. The family's attorney, Elaine Whitfield   Sharp,     called the allegation a blessing in disguise because it  placed  Aafia in     Liberia at a specific time when she can prove she  was in Boston  that week.     
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- Aafia's mother says that only days after  her daughter's      disappearance a man on motorcycle came to her family home and   warned     her to say nothing about what happened if she wanted to see  Aafia  and     her grandchildren again. She hasn't since, and according  to the  Pakistani     Urdu press, the family was picked up by local  authorities and taken  into     custody. A government interior ministry  spokesman and two unnamed  US officials     confirmed the report in the  press. They then retracted their  statements,     but local Chicago NBC  news (based on a Press Trust of India  account) reported     that Aafia  was being interrogated by US intelligence officials.     
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- At the time, the FBI website stated:  "Although the     FBI has no  information indicating this individual is connected to  specific      terrorist activities, the FBI would like to locate and question   this     individual." The agency knew full well what happened - that  Aafia     was in secret detention, that her horrific ordeal had begun,  and  that     they and other US authorities were involved.     
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- A Brief Timeline of Affia's Case     
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- -- March 18, 2003: the FBI issues an alert  requesting     information  about Aafia;     
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- -- March 29: UPI reports that the FBI  believes Aafia     may be an Al  Qaeda "fixer," transferring money to support  "terrorist"     operations;     
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- -- March 30: Aafia disappears en route to  the airport     for a flight  to Rawalpindi;     
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- -- April 3: CNN reports that Al Qaeda  figure Khalid Sheikh     Mohammed  (arrested March 1) mentioned Aafia during interrogation;  Pakistani      authorities deny any knowledge of her whereabouts;     
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- -- April 4: the FBI denies that it captured  and is detaining     Aafia;     
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- -- May 26: John Ashcroft and FBI director  Robert Mueller     cite  reports that Al Queda plans an attack on the US in the summer  or      fall; Aafia is named as an Al Qaeda "operative and facilitator"     and  is one of seven Al Qaeda members being sought;     
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- -- May 28, 2004: Pakistan's Interior  Ministry confirms     that Aafia  was turned over to US authorities in 2003 after it was  unable     to  establish any links she may have had with Al Qaeda;     
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- -- A 2006 Amnesty International report  includes Aafia     as one of  many of the "disappeared" in the "war on terror;"     
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- -- A 2007 Ghost Prisoner Human Rights Watch  report said     that Aafia  "may have once been held" in secret CIA detention;     
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- -- A February 2008 Asian Human Rights  Commission report     said Aafia  was brought to Karachi and severely tortured to secure  her      compliance as a government witness against Khalid Shiekh Mohammed;     
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- -- July 7, 2008: UK journalist Yvonne  Ridley identifies     Aafia as  "Prisoner 650" at the US Bagram, Afghanistan  torture-prison;     
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- -- July 11: US Lt. Col. Rumi Nielson-Green  denies that     any women  are being held at Bagram;     
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- -- July 31: the FBI tells Aafia's brother  that she's     in US custody;     
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- -- August 4: a DOJ press release says that  Afghanistan     National  Police arrested Aafia in Ghazni on July 17 and that she  was wounded      the next day while trying to shoot US Army personnel;     
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- -- August 6: US Magistrate Judge Ronald  Ellis orders     Aafia be held  without bail; her court-appointed lawyer, Elizabeth  Fink,     says  charges against her are "absurd;" a bail hearing was set     for August  11 and another for August 18 to determine if she should  be     tried;     
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- -- August 12: the Washington Pakistani  embassy formally     requests  that Aafia be repatriated to Pakistan;     
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- -- August 13: the US military in  Afghanistan denies it     ever held  Aafia in detention and that an unnamed female prisoner  was someone      else;     
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- -- September 12: according to a report in  MIT's The Tech,     court  documents released today indicate that Aafia "was diagnosed     with  chronic depressive type psychosis;"     
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- -- September 23: Judge Richard Berman  enters a "not     guilty" plea on  behalf of Aafia; she refuses to come to court  because     doing so  requires she be strip-searched; he sets December 17 as the  next      hearing date to determine her fitness to stand trial; he also sets   March     9, 2009 as a tentative trial date;     
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- -- September 29: World Net Daily reports  that for the     "first time  since 9/11, counterterrorism field agents have been  authorized     to  spy on young Muslim men and women - including American citizens -       who have traveled to Pakistan without any specific evidence   (suggesting)     wrongdoing;"     
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- -- October 2: Aafia is moved to the  Carswell Federal     Medical  Center, Fort Worth, TX for psychiatric evaluation; in vain,  her      lawyer pleaded that she not be sent because she urgently needs   medical     treatment;     
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- -- October 6: Pakistani senators Mushahid  Hussain Syed,     Sadia  Abbasi Mehmood, and SM Zafar met with Aafia; Faqir Saeed of  the      Pakistani embassy as well; she tells them of her ordeal - that she   was     abducted in 2003, given an injection, found herself in a cell,  and  was     forced to sign papers and confess to things she didn't do;  her  children's     lives were threatened and she was abused grievously;     
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- -- November 17: Judge Richard Berman  indicates that a     psychiatric  evaluation indicates that Aafia is "not competent to     proceed as a  result of her mental disease, which renders her unable  to      understand the nature and consequences of the proceedings against   her;"     
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- -- December 17: the next scheduled date (in  New York     District  Court) to determine if Aafia is fit to stand trial;     
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- -- March 9, 2009: the tentative date for  Aafia's trial     to begin.     
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- The US Bagram, Afghanistan Torture-Prison     
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- After her abduction, Aafia disappeared into  Bagram hell     and was  known only as "Prisoner 650." Then later, by released     prisoners, as  the "Gray Lady of Bagram" because of her screams     they heard for years.     
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- At one time, Bagram (north of Kabul at the  US air base)     held twice  as many prisoners as Guantanamo and likely still holds  hundreds.      They're crammed into wire cages, routinely tortured, forced to   sleep     on floor mats, and have buckets for latrines, or at least did  until  recently.     Many prisoners are held secretly, have been there  for years, have  no access     to lawyers, or any knowledge of the  allegations against them. Most,  perhaps     all, are innocent victims  and guilty only of being Muslims at the  wrong     time in the wrong place.     
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- What's known about Bagram comes from  released or transfered      prisoners who got access to counsel. In early 2008, The New York   Times     also reported that the International Committee of the Red  Cross  filed     a confidential complaint with US authorities charging  that its  detainees     were held incommunicado for weeks or months in  isolation cells and  subjected     to cruel treatment (torture) in  violation of international law.     
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- In February 2005, The London Guardian  reported that a     prisoner  named Mustafa was blindfolded, handcuffed, gagged, and  forced     to  bend down over a table by three US soldiers. They then "forcibly      rammed a stick up my rectum....I could not stop screaming when this   happened."     
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- Another case involved Wesam Abdulrahman  Ahmed Al Deemawi.     For over  a 40 days, he was threatened with dogs, stripped and  photographed      "in shameful and obscene positions," placed in a cage with a     hook  and hanging rope, and hung on it blindfolded for two days.  Both men      were never charged and were later released.     
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- Other prisoners were beaten, chained, hung  from the ceiling     by  their wrists, and subjected to numerous other tortures and   indignities     - for months or years. In some cases so horrifically  they died.  Aafia     and other women were (and still are) at Bagram and  other US  torture- prisons     (including torture-ships at sea),  according to British journalist  Yvonne     Ridley: "There are many  Muslim women in the captivity of American     forces and if (people  remain) silent, (they'll) lose their sisters  forever."     Some are  treated even worse than Aafia.     
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- Ridley wrote about Bagram's "Prisoner 650"     and her ordeal of  torture and repeatedly being raped for over four  years.     "The cries  of (this) helpless woman echoed (with such torment) in     the jail  that (it) prompted prisoners to go on hunger strike."  Ridley     called  her a "gray lady (because) she (was) almost a ghost, a  spectre      whose cries and screams continue to haunt those who heard her. This   would     never happen to a Western woman." It did to Aafia, other  Muslim  women     as well, and their ordeal continues horrifically.     
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- US and International Law on Prisoners of  War and Enforced      Disappearances     
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- US and international law are clear and  unequivocal on     prisoner  detentions and their treatment. America under George Bush  defiles      it, and, given the rogue team he's assembled, the Obama   administration     (with or without Guantanamo) promises little or no  change. These  practices     are grievous crimes of war and against  humanity and should never be  tolerated     against anyone for any  reason. Yet they persist.     
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- The US War Crimes Act (1996) defines these  offenses as     grave  breaches under the Geneva Conventions (1949) and violations  of its      Common Article 3. It states in part:     
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- ...."the following acts are prohibited at  any time     and in any  place....:     
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- -- violence to life and person (including)  murder, mutilation,      cruel treatment and torture;     
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- -- ....humiliating and degrading  treatment;"     
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- -- sentencing or executing detainees  "without previous     judgment  pronounced by a regularly constituted court affording all  the      judicial guarantees....recognized as indispensable by civilized   peoples;"     and     
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- -- assuring wounded and sick are (properly)  cared for.     
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- The US Army Field Manual 27-10 is also  explicit on the     rule of law.  It incorporates the Nuremberg Principles prohibiting  crimes     against  humanity, and specifically obligates soldiers to disobey  illegal      orders or be subject to prosecution under international law.   Paragraph     498 states that any person, military or civilian, who  commits a  crime     under international law bears responsibility and  may be punished.  Paragraph     499 defines a "war crime." Paragraph 509  denies the defense     of superior orders in the commission of a crime,  and paragraph 510  denies     the defense of an "act of state."     
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- Under Article VI of the Constitution (the  supremacy clause),      international law is part of domestic law, and US presidents take   an     oath under Article II, Section 1, Clause 7 to "preserve, protect      and defend the Constitution...." Further, Article II, Section 3   requires     the president to "take Care that the Laws be faithfully  exercised."     
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- International human rights law also  strictly prohibits     secret  detentions. Under Principle 6 of the (May 1989) UN  Principles on      the Effective Prevention and Investigation of Extra-legal,   Arbitrary     and Summary Executions:     
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- "Governments shall ensure that persons  deprived     of their liberty  are (to be) held in officially recognised places  of custody,     and  that accurate information on their custody and whereabouts,   including     transfers, is made promptly available to their relatives  and  lawyers or     other persons of confidence."     
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- US and international laws leave no  ambiguity on torture     or its  seriousness when practiced. The (1949) Third Geneva  Convention's      Article 13 (on the Treatment of Prisoners of War) states:     
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- Detainees "must at all times be humanely  treated.     Any unlawful act  or omission by the Detaining Power causing death  or seriously      endangering the health of a prisoner of war in its custody is   prohibited....(these     persons) must at all times be protected,  particularly against acts  of     violence or intimidation...."     
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- Third Geneva also prohibits physical or  mental torture,     all other  forms of coercion, collective punishment, corporal  punishments,     and  any type of violence. These acts are "war crimes." Various     other US  and international laws also prohibit them, yet they're  official     US  policy, so far with impunity.     
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- In December 1992, the UN General Assembly  passed the     Declaration on  the Protection of all Persons from Enforced  Disappearance.     It  states that:     
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- "any act of enforced disappearance is an  offence     to human dignity."  It "places the persons subjected thereto     outside the protection of  the law and inflicts severe suffering on  them     and their families.  It constitutes a violation of the rules of  international     law  guaranteeing, inter alia (among other things), the right to   recognition     as a person before the law, the right to liberty and  security of  the person,     and the right not to be subjected to  torture and other cruel,  inhuman     or degrading treatment or  punishment....No state shall practice,  permit     or tolerate enforced  disappearances" and must terminate any such     acts "in any territory  under its jurisdiction." Such practices     are crimes of war and  against humanity.     
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- In 2005, the Center for Human Rights and  Global Justice     (CHR&GJ,  New York University School of Law) published a report  titled:     "Fate  and Whereabouts Unknown: Detainees in the "War on Terror."     It  presented "factual summaries of (28) individuals who may be in      secret (US) detention sites" and included known information about      Aafia at the time.     
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- CHR&GJ said enforced disappearances  happen "when     individuals are  deprived of their liberty by state agents and the  state     fails to  provide information about their fate or whereabouts;  through     these  actions, detainees are placed outside the protection of law."     
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- "Disappearances" include these practices:     
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- -- individuals (often unidentified) held in  secret US-run     or  controlled "black sites;"     
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- -- individuals in foreign-based sites under  US control     or direction;     
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- -- individuals "extraordinarily  renditioned"     to "black" or other  sites; and     
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- -- individuals held in conflict areas and  not properly     registered  and/or identified, such as CIA "ghost prisoners"     on US military  facilities like at Bagram.     
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- United States of America v. Aafia Siddiqui     
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- On September 2, the Justice Department  (DOJ) indicted     Aafia "for  attempting to kill United States Nationals in  Afghanistan     and Six  Additional Charges." On September 4, she was arraigned  before     Judge  Richard Berman in US District Court for the Southern District  of      New York.     
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- Michael Garcia, US Attorney for the  Southern District     of New York,  stated (in a September 2 press release) that on July  18,     2008, "a  team of United States servicemen and law enforcement  officers,     and  others assisting them, attempted to interview Aafia Siddiqui in   Ghazni,     Afghanistan, where she had been detained by local police  the day  before....unbeknownst     to the United States interview team,  unsecured, behind a curtain --  Siddiqui     obtained one of the United  States Army officer's M-4 rifles and  attempted     to fire it, and did  fire it, at another United States Army officer  and     other members of  the United States interview team....     
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- Siddiqui then assaulted one of the United  States Army     interpreters,  as he attempted to obtain the M-4 rifle from her.  Siddiqui      subsequently assaulted one of the FBI agents and one of the United   States     Army officers, as they attempted to subdue her."     
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- Garcia said nothing about years of torture  and rape at     Bargram or  that this frail, weakened, 110 pound woman was  confronted by     three  US Army officers, two FBI agents, and two Army interpreters,  yet      inexplicably managed to assault three of them, get one of their   rifles,     open fire at close range, hit no one, and only she was  severely  wounded.     As her attorney put it:     
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- "Picture this woman who is very tiny (and  extremely     frail and  weakened from her ordeal), and ask yourself how she  engaged     in  armed conflict....with six (armed and well-trained) military  men,      how did this happen? And how did she get shot? I think you can   answer     that, can't you (and question the absurdity of DOJ's charges   against her)?     
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- Garcia outlined, but didn't indict, on the  above-listed     allegations  about specific "cells," handwritten notes about     a "mass casualty  attack," constructing "dirty bombs,"     and using various devices and  means to deliver them. It was also  alleged     that before 9/11 she  travelled to Liberia where she was involved in  illegal     diamond  trading to support Al Qaeda and then opened a Baltimore  post office      box for one of its members. None of these claims are credible or   showed     up in her indictment.     
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- Count One     
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- Attempted Murder of United States Nationals  by obtaining     a US Army  Officer's M-4 rifle and attempting to fire and firing it  at     him,  two other US Interview Team members, and repeatedly stating  her      intent and desire to kill Americans.     
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- Count Two     
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- Attempted Murder of United States Officers  and Employees     in the  same manner while they were engaged in and on account of the   performance     of their official duties.     
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- Count Three     
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- Armed Assault of United States Officers and  Employees     in the same  manner.     
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- Count Four     
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- Discharge of A Firearm During (a) Crime of  Violence as     described  above.     
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- Count Five     
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- Assault of United States Officers and  Employees as described     above.     
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- Count Six     
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- (Further charges of) Assault of United  States Officers     and  Employees as described above.     
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- Count Seven     
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- (More charges of) Assault of United States  Officers and     Employees  as described above.     
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- Aafia's Deteriorating Health     
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- In response to British MP Lord Nazir's  letter on Aafia's      whereabouts, US authorities confirmed that she's incarcerated at   Carswell     Federal Medical Center, Fort Worth, TX (pursuant to an  October 1,  2008     US District Court, NY judicial directive) where  she's undergoing  psychiatric     evaluation, but not getting  desperately needed medical attention.     
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- Nazir earlier raised questions about her  detention and     said "she  (was) physically tortured and continuously raped by the     officers at  the (Bagram) prison" - for over four years. He now  wants     her  immediately released and repatriated to Pakistan after it was   learned     she's held on dubious charges plus all the horrific  treatment she  endured     - yet is guilty of nothing.     
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- Aafia is in deplorable condition and,  according to Judge     Berman,  not in a correct state of mind to stand trial. On August 7,  2008,      Iqbal Haider, Co-chairperson of Human Rights Commission of Pakistan   (HRCP)     expressed concern about her. He called it shocking and of  grave  concern     that pictures of her show a beat-up frail and  helpless woman, the  effects     of years of torture, abuse, and  continuous rape. There are dark  circles     under her eyes, a badly  repaired broken nose, "made up" teeth     and crumbled lips, and  overall "a picture of a severely dehydrated,     sick person almost as  if on the death bed. It shows the inhumane  brutality     of an  apparently civilised nation by the administration of a  country      which claims to be much civilised."     
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- According to HRCP and Aafia's family, her  physical condition     is  deplorable, and she badly needs immediate medical treatment  outside      the Carswell prison where it's not given. "Her wound was oozing      blood," and her clothes were soaked in it. Earlier in custody, one      of her kidneys was removed, yet her abdominal pain persists. She   has     large stitches down her torso from the surgery, negligently  done,  and     may be suffering from internal bleeding. Her teeth were  removed.  Her nose     was broken and improperly reset. Her gunshot  wound was  incompetently dressed,     and her overall condition is dire  and life-threatening.     
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- This poor woman was savaged by a criminal  state operating     outside  the law for political advantage. Her outrageous treatment   continues.     Her son, Ahmed (a US citizen), is being detained in  Afghanistan,  but the     whereabouts of her other two children is unknown.     
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- A Final Comment     
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- Post-9/11, the Bush administration:     
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- -- declared permanent war without cause;     
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- -- ravaged Iraq and Afghanistan;      
- -- incited and/or engaged in other direct  and proxy wars;          
- -- militarized the country;      
- -- enacted repressive police state laws;      
- -- trashed the rule of law;      
- -- made human and civil rights a  nonstarter;     
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- -- defiled every human dignity imaginable;      
- -- institutionalized illegal spying and  electoral theft;          
- -- made torture official US policy;     
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- -- criminalized dissent;     
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- -- waged war on working Americans;     
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- -- engineered the largest ever wealth  transfer to the     rich;      
- -- turned government into a crime  syndicate;      
- -- looted the national treasury;      
- -- bankrupted the nation;     
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- -- criminally defrauded the public; and      
- -- waged a global jihad against Islam.     
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- Aafia is one of its most aggrieved. She's  been destroyed     physically  and emotionally. Her former being no longer exists. Her  survival     is  in jeopardy, yet she remains incarcerated, has been indicted,  will      be tried, likely convicted, and may spend the rest of her life in   prison.     And for what? For her faith, devoutness, ethnicity, humble  charity,  all     at the wrong time in America. The message to everyone  is clear.  We're     all Aafia Siddiquis.     
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http://www.rense.com/general84/dg.htm
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