Dr Aafia Sadiqui what a story, what a dignity!shamne on the Nazi US gouvernement!

justoneofmillion

Junior Member
:salam2:This was sent to me by my brother alkhatiri through email i decided to post it in here! what are Muslim governments doing they certainly do have diplomatic relations with these luciferians i mean the Arabs what are they doing any hint about what is being done at the governments level?,this is really important!:confused:
[yt]x0fofvUMefQ[/yt]

'I want you to come to know of the concern and dedication that this simple 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.'






'She is a high security risk.'

- Christopher LaVigne, assistant US attorney, on August 11th when trying to convince a judge to prevent Aafia from seeing a doctor for her gunshot wound


During the time of the Prophet (صلى الله عليه و سلم), those who entered Islam were of two types: those who remained in their lands with the general populace practicing the basic tenets of the religion, and those who took it upon themselves to migrate and join the Prophet in his expeditions. There are ahadith that show that the Prophet treated these two groups differently from each other due to their difference in status. For example, Muslim and at-Tirmidhi report that when appointing a leader to a battalion, he would instruct him on how to deal with those of the enemy who became Muslims, saying: '…invite them to migrate from their lands to the land of the Muhajirin, and inform them that if they do so, they will have all the privileges and obligations of the Muhajirin. If they refuse to migrate, tell them that they will have the status of the Bedouins, and will be subjected to the commands of Allah like the rest of the believers…' This distinction was simply of one group deciding to take upon its shoulders certain responsibilities in contrast to the other whose inactivity limited them to a very individualistic, localized, benign practice of Islam. One can in essence say that the Prophet divided the practice of the Muslims at the time into two types: the religion of the Migrants (Din al-Muhajirin, whose adherents took upon their shoulders the responsibilities of aiding and giving victory to Islam), and the religion of the Bedouins (Din al-A'rab, whose adherents did not go beyond the basics).

Although the depiction is of a situation that existed over a thousand years ago, it is an eternal pattern that Muslims will be distributed amongst these levels in every era and in every place. So, one can notice this distinction even amongst the practicing Muslims of the East and West. The Din al-A'rab of the past can be compared to the Islam that is limited to the five pillars, eating zabihah, and keeping the local mosque clean. Considering how difficult it is in the West to come across even these Muslims, imagine what joy comes to the eye and heart to see those who go a step further and reach the level of adhering to Din al-Muhajirin – those whose concern spans the entire Ummah, driving them to get up and become active workers for Islam, to dedicate their every minute to the service of Allah however they can no matter what other responsibilities clutter their busy lives, to have their hearts beat with the rest of the Muslims – all this with their heads raised high and paying no regard to those around them who eat and live like cattle, as it was said:



هكذا الاحرار في دنيا العبيد
Such are the free in a world of the enslaved...

Recently, the entire world has been speaking about one such person - a short, thin college student, wife, and mother of three small children. Her name is Aafia Siddiqui.

I want you to be drawn to the story of this woman and also understand why I was drawn to it. I want you to come to know of the concern and dedication that this simple 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.

Those who knew Aafia recall that she was a very small, quiet, polite, and shy woman who was barely noticeable in a gathering. However, they add that when necessary, she would say what needed to be said. She was once giving a speech at a fundraiser for Bosnian orphans at a local mosque in which she began lambasting the men in the audience for not stepping up to do what she was doing. She would plead: 'Where are the men? Why do I have to be the one standing up here and doing this work?' And she was right, as she was a mother, a wife, and a student in a community full of brothers with nothing to show when it came to Islamic work.

When she was a student at MIT, she began organizing drives to deliver copies of the Qur'an and other Islamic literature to the Muslims in the local prisons. She would have them delivered in boxes to a local mosque, and she would then show up at the mosque and carry the heavy boxes by herself all the way down the three flights of very steep stairs. Subhan Allah, look at the Qadar of Allah: this woman who would spend so much time and effort to help Muslim prisoners is now herself a prisoner (I ask Allah to free her)!

Her dedication to Islam was also very evident on campus. A 2004 article from Boston Magazine mentions that '...she wrote three guides for members who wanted to teach others about Islam. On the group's website, Siddiqui explained how to run a daw'ah table, an informational booth used at school events to educate people about, and persuade them to convert to, Islam.' The article continues to mention that in the guides, she wrote: '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 through this movement, through years to come. Think and plan big. May Allah give this strength and sincerity to us so that our humble effort continue, and expands until America becomes a Muslim land.'

Allahu Akbar...look at this himmah (concern)...look at these lofty aspirations and goals! As men, we should be ashamed to have to learn such lessons from a sister.

She would drive out of her way every week to teach the local Muslim children on Sundays. I was told by a sister that she would also drive out of her way every week to visit a small group of reverts to teach them the basics of Islam. One of the sisters who attended her circles described Aafia as 'not going out of her way to be noticed by anybody, or to be anyone's friend. She just came out here to teach us about Allah, and English wasn't even her first language!'

Another sister who would attend her circles describes: 'She shared with us that we should never make excuses for who we are. She said: 'Americans have no respect for people who are weak. Americans will respect us if we stand up and we are strong.''

Allahu Akbar...O Allah, free this woman!

But Aafia's biggest passion was helping the oppressed Muslims around the globe. When war in Bosnia broke out, she did not sit back and watch with one knee over the other. Rather, she immediately sought out whatever means were within her grasp to make a difference. She didn't sit in a dreamy bubble thinking all day about how she wished that she could go over to Bosnia and help with relief efforts. She got up and did what she could: she would speak to people to raise awareness, she would ask for donations, she would send e-mails, she would give slideshow presentations - the point I'm trying to make here is that Aafia showed that there is always something we can do to help our brothers and sisters, the least of which is a spoken word to raise awareness to those who are unaware. Sitting back and doing nothing is never an option. She once gave a speech at a local mosque to raise funds for Bosnian orphans, and when the audience was just sitting there watching her, she asked: 'How many people in this room own more than one pair of boots?' When half the room raised their hands, she said: 'So, donate them to these Bosnians who are about to face a brutal winter!' She was so effective in her plea that even the imam took off his boots and donated them!

There is much more to say about how passionate this sister was for Islam. However, the above gives you an idea of what she was like, and should hopefully serve as an inspiration for brothers before sisters to become active in serving Islam through whatever means are available. Remember that she was doing all of this while being a mother and a PhD student, and most of us do much less despite having much more free time.

So, having this image of Aafia in my mind, I was taken aback at what I saw when she was brought into court for what should have been her bail hearing. The door on the front left side of the courtroom was slowly opened to reveal a frail, limp, exhausted woman who could barely hold her own head up straight in a pale blue wheelchair. She was dressed in a Guantanamo-style orange prison uniform, and her frail head was wrapped in a white hijab that was pulled down to cover her bone-thin arms (the prison uniform is shortsleeved). Her lawyers quickly sat around her, and the hearing began.

The head prosecutor, assistant US attorney Christopher LaVigne, walked in with a group of three or four FBI agents, one of whom was a female who looked Pakistani (لعنة الله عليهم). The defense began by announcing that the bail hearing was to be postponed because of Aafia's medical condition. Essentially, Aafia's lawyers reasoned that there was no point of her being out on bail if she was near death. So, they demanded that she be allowed a doctor's visit before anything else. LaVigne got up and objected, saying that Aafia was a risk to the security of the United States. The judge didn't seem to buy that, and the prosecutor continued arguing that 'this is a woman who attempted to blast her way out of captivity.' As soon as this was said, I looked over and noticed Aafia shaking her head in desperation and sadness, as if she felt that the whole world was against her. By the way, Aafia was so small and weak that I could barely see her from behind the wheelchair. All I could see was her head slumped over to the left and wrapped in the hijab, and her right arm sticking out.

I got a better understanding of why she was so sad and desperate when her lawyer began listing details of her condition:

* She now has brain damage from her time in US custody
* One of her kidneys was removed while in US custody
* She is unable to digest her food since part of her intestines was removed during surgery while in US custody
* She has layers and layers of sewed up skin from the surgery for the gunshot wound
* She has a large surgical scar from her chest area all the way down to her torso

With all of this, she had not been visited by a single doctor the entire time of her incarceration in the US despite being in constant incredible abdominal pain following her sloppy surgery in Afghanistan - pain for which she was being given nothing more than Ibuprofen! Ibuprofen is purchased over the counter to treat headaches!

With all of this, the prosecutor had the audacity and shamelessness to try to prevent her from being seen by a doctor due to her being a 'security risk.' When he was pressed by the judge as to why Aafia was sitting all this time in a NYC prison without basic medical care, the government attorney stuttered, said that it was 'a complicated situation,' and capped it with the expected cheap shot that 'it was her decision as she refused to by seen by a male doctor.' As soon as the prosecutor said that last bit, I saw Aafia's thin arm shoot up and shake back and forth to the judge (as if to say 'No! He’s lying!'). I felt so sorry for her, as she was obviously quite frustrated at the lies being spilled out before her very eyes. Her lawyer then put her hand on her arm and began stroking it to comfort her and calm her down.

When the hearing was over, one scholarly statement stuck in my mind, and it is where Ibn al-Qayyim said that a person rises in his closeness to Allah until: '...there remains only one obstacle from which the enemy calls him from, and this is an obstacle that he must face. If anyone were to be saved from this obstacle, it would have been the Messengers and Prophets of Allah, and the noblest of His Creation. This is the obstacle of Satan unleashing his troops upon the believer with various types of harm: by way of the hand, the tongue, and the heart. This occurs in accordance with the degree of goodness that exists within the believer. So, the higher he is in degree, the more the enemy unleashes his troops and helps them against him, and overwhelms him with his followers and allies in various ways. There is no way around this obstacle, because the firmer he is in calling to Allah and fulfilling His commands, the more the enemy becomes intent upon deceiving him with foolish people. So, he has essentially put on his body armor in this obstacle, and has taken it upon himself to confront the enemy for Allah's Sake and in His Name, and his worship in doing so is the worship of the best of worshippers.'

And this was absolutely clear that day when looking at the scene in the court. Despite Aafia's apparent physical weakness and frailty, there was a certain 'izzah (honor) and strength that I felt emanating from her the entire time. Everything from the way she forcefully shook her hand at the judge when the prosecutor would lie, to how she was keen to wear her hijab on top of her prison garments despite horrible circumstances that would make hijab the last thing on most people's minds, to the number of FBI agents, US Marshals, reporters, officials, etc. who were all stuffed in this small room to observe this frail, weak, short, quiet, female 'security risk' - everything pointed to the conclusion that the only thing all of these people were afraid of was the strength of this sister's iman.

This is the situation of our dear sister, a Muslim woman in captivity…

What can I say...?

I will not close by mentioning the obligation of helping to free Muslim prisoners. I will not mention how al-Mu'tasim razed an entire city to the ground to rescue a single Muslim woman. I will not go back to the days of Salah ad-Din or 'Umar bin 'Abd al-'Aziz, who rescued Muslim prisoners in the tens of thousands. I cannot be greedy enough to mention these things at this point because what is even sadder than what is happening to Aafia Siddiqui is how few the Muslims were who even bothered to show up to her hearing in a city of around half a million Muslims (not counting the surrounding areas), and that not a single Muslim organization in the United States has taken up the sister's cause or even spoken a word in her defense, and as Ibn al-Qayyim said: 'If ghayrah (protective jealousy) leaves a person’s heart, his faith will follow it.'

Unfortunately, in a time where most of us are following Din al-A'rab, it seems that the best person to teach us a lesson in how to help Aafia Siddiqui would have been Aafia herself.



و الله المستعان
here was this thread by Appa about it also check it
http://www.turntoislam.com/forum/showthread.php?t=40049

wassalaam jameel
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Salaam,

Jameel be patient. It is enough that we are posting information about her. I had zero responses on my two threads about her. Many people will view the post but are scared to respond. They do not want to get involved.

Skywalker...she is a neuroscientist..her crime...it is all concocted. This more than any nightmare Kafka could have written. Solzhenitsyn would weep at this. Please refer to the posts on Prisoner 650. She disappeared for five years and is suddenly in an Afgani prison shooting an agent and she is shot. She is in NYC awaiting something.

Some members of the Pakistain senate are flying to the US to see her.
CagePrisoners. com has information.
 

justoneofmillion

Junior Member
:salam2:I mean if i was a president or a king of some petro monarchy,i d say either you release her and let her see a doctor or i ll bring it to 250 $ the barrel period,this is what this paper ubbad worship .This is so important,it is not negotiable at all being reasonable in this case is like burying your pride in a desert where it can no longer flourish. Why are there no leaders with enough guts out there?Are their hearts formed so differently that they shall not feel what we are feeling! I wouldn t care about the consequences ,if a sister is suffering this much then either she is freed or we launch an economic war, by any means necessary like Malcolm would say.These people can put pressure if they wanted to surely they can,with the trillions of dollars they are putting into the bank of America ..etc come on ,not even a word? this is their daughter their sister subhanallah what else would they care for,anoither garage full of Lamborghinis and Bentleys is she not more worth than any skyliner the dedicate time and effort to!,why they are not doing it allahu aalaam !but i don t understand it at all i dont no matter how hard i try...
 

Skywalker

Junior Member
As-salam-o'alaikum

I got it all. I searched it on net. Really heart rendering story.

Shame on Pakistani Govt.
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Salaam,

Fear brother it is simple as that. I want my meal tonight..I do not care what you do not have to eat. And they rant and rave about what is Islamically correct. Get off your rear end and at least make a phone call. I will stop brohter. I will stop.
 

justoneofmillion

Junior Member
:salam2:please do share this article with everyone you know just email it further ,send it to Muslim organizations,human rights organism Muslim associations anything you come across to scholars you have contact with,your imam your mosque your school teacher,your city hall do share Allah swt will be witness that you did, please do so... it is the least we can do may Allah reward you with all that you wish for let us do something for her.

wassalaam
jameel
 

Munawar

Striving for Paradise
:salam2:
Brother I am with you. Dr Aafia was originally kidnapped by CIA (perhaps with the help of Pakistani agencies) and she was tortured by the Americans (now that they are becoming so better and expert in torturer) and then suddenly after they shot her then "informed" the world that she was "arrested" in Kabul and then brought her in NewYork at a lightning speed for a kangroo trial. Wow..

Well all this hoopla doesn't cut it. She was kidnapped and then tortured ... this is a fact, the rest is all lies. You are right ... Muslims are becoming coward these days but this will still not stop the lucifarians from doing more harm to them, sometimes one individual at a time sometimes the whole country at a time. And this will continue until we reach to the point mentioned in the hadiths of our beloved Prophet (SAW).

There are people trying to help Dr Aafia and free her but nothing happening at the official level as it should have been. Example:

http://www.dawn.com/2008/08/13/nat6.htm

http://www.dawn.com/2008/08/12/nat4.htm

Anyways, brothers and sisters pray Allah that he help us and make us a good Muslim so that we could stand up and defend our rights. Ameen. :salah:
:wasalam:
 

nori suja'i

Junior Member
Shame to the ppl who were involved in the kidnapped/tortured of this lady. she didnt harm anybody but just doing her duty as a servant of Allah by helping to spread Islam/helping the needy. not all of us are culpable doing what she did.
Her experience in the hand of the enemy of Islam totally the opposite from the experience of King Richard of England on the hand of Islam warrior headed by Salehuddeen Al Ayubi.
Its really shameful, eventhough i didnt know her but i've been following the news about her. May Allah reserve her place in the rank of mujaheed, Ameen.
 

warda A

Sister
:salam2:

It is really quite sad that a small frail woman would be a high security risk
She did not have a witnesses who could come and help talk about her excellent character? What happened to the rights of a first offender? i suppose all those got thrown out the window immediately someone says high security risk.
The Arab leaders are just that plain simple puppets.
 

Munawar

Striving for Paradise
Latest news

:salam2:
Just to keep this thread alive and inform people:

Pakistan parliament demands repatriation of Dr Aafia Siddiqui
ISLAMABAD, Aug 21 (AFP):
Pakistan's parliament Thursday demanded the immediate repatriation of Dr Aafia Siddiqui held in the United States on charges of trying to kill US officials in Afghanistan. A resolution moved by Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi and adopted unanimously by the lower house also demanded immediate information on the whereabouts of Dr Afia Siddiqui's three children. Siddiqui, 36, disappeared from Karachi in 2003. She then featured on a list of US suspects linked to Al-Qaeda the following year. She is said to have been held in prisons in Afghanistan and tortured brutally. The US authorities in Afghanistan showed Dr Siddiqui was arrested on July 17 in Afghanistan, extradited to New York on August 4 and indicted the next day on a charge of attempted murder. They claimed she was wounded during an alleged shootout with FBI agents and US military officers when she was questioned in Afghanistan.
(First Posted @ 21:10 PST Updated @ 22:00 PST)

:wasalam:
 

xSharingan01x

TraVeLer
:salam2:

Thank you for posting brother.
Anything is justifiable if it can be linked to Al-Qaeda or terrorism.
This is so sad. We should all pray for her and do as much as we can.


:wasalam:
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Salaam,

FYI:
US Authorities To Level "Qaeda-Linked Terror Charges" Against Dr Aafia

Print this article
Send to friend
21/08/2008

Washington, Aug 20 : When Pakistani-American doctor Aafia Siddiqui is produced before a US court on September 3, the US authorities would bring grave charges against her ranging from money laundering for Al Qaeda to assisting the terrorist group in other ways, including efforts to procure military equipment.

The US authorities would also bring facts about her past "terror" activities like giving slide shows and rousing speeches to collect donations for the militants' cause in the aftermath of the massacre of Muslims in Bosnia, and spreading Islamic teachings by setting up a non-profit organisation in the US, reported the Daily Times.

The US security and intelligence authorities believe that Dr Aafia was underground of her own will and accord, and that for her own reasons she went "missing" in 2003 from Karachi.

Besides, the US intelligence believes that the terror suspect's three children were in the safe hands of those who were sheltering her. It is noteworthy that her family never lodged a missing person report with the Pakistani police even once during the five years it now claims Siddiqui was in US or/and Pakistani custody, say the US agencies.

Like the previous hearing on August 11, her lawyers may or may not apply for bail, which is likely to be refused. It is not certain that the terrorism-related charges will be slapped on Siddiqui on that day, but it is certain that they will be brought against her eventually, added the paper.

The US security and intelligence authorities also believe that Siddiqui was underground of her own will and accord and for her own reasons since she went “missing” in 2003 from Karachi. She may have been in Pakistan all along or in Afghanistan or in both at different times. US intelligence also believes that Siddiqui’s three children are in the safe hands of those who were sheltering her. It is noteworthy that her family never lodged a missing person report with the Pakistani police even once during the five years it now claims Siddiqui was in US or/and Pakistani custody. In order to assuage domestic opinion on this issue, which has become highly emotional, the government is doing what it can to obtain for her from US authorities both care and comfort in prison. It has even asked for her repatriation to Pakistan, a request that has no chance of being accepted. There is also a legal question mark over her repatriation from Afghanistan to the US without the Pakistan government’s knowledge.

US officials claim that Siddiqui went underground in 2003 and kept eluding them until she surfaced in Ghazni with a young boy (who is in Afghan hands) last month.

Her lawyer Elaine Whitfield Sharp, who came to Washington last week to meet Ambassador Husain Haqqani, contends that Siddiqui is innocent and she was kept in the same location and her captors were Americans, a charge that the US ambassador to Pakistan has formally denied in a letter published in this newspaper. When Sharp was asked how Siddiqui landed in Afghanistan, she replied that it was a “long story” that could not be told.

As a student, Siddiqui raised funds for the Muslim victims of the Bosnian genocide that she asked to be sent to the Al-Kifah Refugee Centre in Brooklyn, which the Justice Department maintains diverted such funds to militants. She was also involved in the establishment of the Dawa Resource Centre, a programme run from a Boston mosque, distributing Qurans and offering Islamic advice to prison inmates. She also urged women to wear the hijab and refuse to shake hands with men.

In 2002, the FBI questioned her and her then husband Muhammad Amjad Khan, a doctor, about their purchase of night-vision goggles, body armour, and military instruction manuals. Months later, the family returned to Pakistan, where Siddiqui and Khan divorced just before the birth of their third child, according to Sharp.

Married:
Siddiqui is then believed to have married an Al Qaeda man by the name of Ammar al-Baluchi, a nephew of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-proclaimed mastermind of the 9/11 attacks. US officials have been vehement in rejecting allegations that Siddiqui was in their custody all along. Dean Boyd of the Justice Department has called the allegations “absolutely baseless and false,” while a CIA spokesman has said that the agency “for several years” had “no information regarding her whereabouts whatsoever”. Gregory Sullivan, a State Department spokesman has said, “It is our belief that she has all this time been concealed from the public view by her own choosing.”

Siddiqui was born on March 2, 1972, came to Texas in 1990, graduated from the MIT in 1995 and obtained a PhD from Brandeis University in cognitive neuroscience in 2001. Her three children are: Ahmed (12), Mariam (10) and Suleman (5 ½). She left for Pakistan in 2002, returned in February 2003 and returned almost immediately. She disappeared in March of that year.


SOURCE: Tehran Times, Daily Times http://www.cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=25923
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Salaam.

FYI:



Print this article
Send to friend
22/08/2008

By Zofeen Ebrahim





KARACHI, Aug 20 (IPS) - ‘’For you it’s just another story. If you want the truth go to Ghazni where you will get more than I can ever tell you about my sister," said a distraught Fouzia Siddiqi, speaking with IPS, in a voice breaking with helpless desperation.



Fouzia’s younger sister, Aafia Siddiqi, 35, made headlines after the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) announced, on Aug. 4, her "arrest" for attempting to "murder and assault" United States’ officers and employees outside the governor’s office in Ghazni, Afghanistan, on Jul. 17. No soldiers were reported injured in the incident but Aafia received bullet injuries.



Aafia, a neuroscientist, has since been lodged in a Manhattan jail and the preliminary hearing of her case set for Sep. 3. According to charges framed against her in a New York court, she was, at the time of her arrest, found carrying documents describing how to make explosives and chemical, biological and radiological weapons. She, allegedly, also had a list of landmarks in the U.S. and ‘’chemical substances’’ in sealed containers.



Aafia’s resurfacing in Ghazni, five years after her disappearance in the southern port city of Karachi, has shaken the nation. The whereabouts of her three children, who were with her at the time she was kidnapped, remain unclear.



Aafia's story began in March 2003 when this Pakistani woman, then 30, along with her three children, then aged between four months and seven years, became one more victim of numerous disappearances that have been linked to Pakistan’s role in the U.S.-led ‘war-on-terror’. The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) has stated that she was initially picked up by an intelligence agency in Pakistan and so the "Pakistan government is also accountable for the crime".



The handing over of Aafia to U.S. authorities has been criticised by Pakistani political leaders. "This is not only a heinous act, but tantamount to selling the country's sovereignty and independence to another nation. It is shameful, utterly humiliating to every Pakistani," said Qazi Hussain Ahmed, leader of the Jamaat -e-Islami party at a press conference here last week.



"It is high time that the present government act like an independent sovereign nation and form its own foreign policy leaving behind the legacy of a discredited military dictator," Ahmed stressed, referring Pervez Musharraf who resigned as president on Monday, amid criticism at home of his pro-U.S. policies.



In 2004, then FBI director Robert Mueller named Aafia among the seven al-Qaeda associates who were being sought in connection with possible terrorist threats to the U.S.



Two weeks prior to Aafia’s arrest in Ghazni, a British journalist, Yvonne Ridley, held a press conference in Islamabad, in which she identified Aafia as ‘Prisoner No. 650’, being held in solitary confinement at the detention centre attached to the U.S. air base at Bagram.



Ridley referred to the book ‘Enemy Combatant’ by Moazzam Beg, a former Guantanamo and Bagram prisoner, who had mentioned hearing endless screams, apparently by a woman being tortured, during his detention at Bagram.



"Based on the testimony of detainees held in Bagram in 2003 and 2004, it is clear that there was a woman being held at the base. Whether or not that woman was Aafia Siddiqi is something that, at the moment, cannot be verified," said Asim Qureshi, senior researcher with the rights group Cageprisoners. "However, Dr. Siddiqi has confirmed that she was held in Bagram for years," said Qureshi, responding to queries from IPS.



Fouzia describes her sister, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Brandeis University alumna, as a ‘’fun-loving people’s person," who had completed her PhD on "how to improve memory among mentally challenged children’’.



"I fear for her life. They probably don’t want her to see the light of day,’’ said Fouzia. ‘’If they release her, the truth will come out."



A press release by the HRCP says: "A close look at the picture (in newspapers here) shows the years of torture -- dark circles under her eyes, a broken and badly fixed nose, made up teeth and crumbled lips. It is a picture of a severely dehydrated and unwell person, almost as if on the deathbed. It shows the inhumane brutality of a ‘civilised’ nation by the administration of the country which claims to be civilised."



According to the description given to Fouzia given by her brother, a Houston-based architect, who was allowed to meet Aafia in New York, she was in a ‘’fragile condition and in severe pain’’.



"She was suffering from multiple bullet wounds that had been not been attended to. She came to court in a wheelchair and was suffering from intense abdominal pain for which she was given aspirin, which could only act as poison for her ulcerous condition," Fouzia said. Aafia had earlier informed her lawyer that she believed part of her intestines had been removed.



"My brother told me he saw the perpetrators and the victim together in one room. There was not a shred of compassion, just stony-eyed hate," Fouzia said, tears welling up in her eyes. "She has been condemned even before the trial."



"You know, it would have been better if she had died. I believed she had died and was reconciled to the idea. That way I could move on... and then she re-surfaced, like resurrected from the dead, and that brought some hope. But seeing her like this, it just breaks my heart," continued Fouzia.



Since the announcement of her arrest there have been protests from rights groups across Pakistan.



Amina Janjua, who has been leading a campaign for the recovery of almost 400 missing persons, as chairperson of Defence of the Human Rights, formed after her husband was kidnapped three years ago said she could feel the anguish and utter helplessness of Aafia’s family.



"After seeing Aafia’s pictures splashed in newspapers across the country and the torture marks she bore for five years, I fear for my husband’s life too,'' Janjua said. '' But being a woman, and a mother whose children have been separated from her, I can feel the torment she’s going through."



"To say that she (Aafia) had been taken into custody only on Jul. 17, 2008 is a blatant lie, as transparently ugly as any falsehood can be. The insinuation, that she had been hiding herself since 2003, is a travesty of truth, an affront to people’s commonsense," stated HRCP.



But Aafia’s case seems to be shrouded in mystery and no one is able to piece together the puzzle of her disappearance and reappearance. This has made it difficult for rights groups to bring up her case.



Her sister refuses to divulge information about her husband. And if there is a husband, he has not made any statement so far.



U.S. officials have said that she was married a second time to a nephew of Sep. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad (KSM). This has been fiercely disputed by the HRCP.



Zaid Hamid, a defence consultant, heading an Islamabad-based think tank ‘Brasstacks’, does not see any mystery about Aafia’s case except for the ‘’criminal betrayals and the deafening silence of our government, media and civil society about all Guantanamo prisoners, especially Pakistanis."



"We consider Dr. Aafia’s case an instance of utterly unconscionable and most brutal form of attack on a human being’s individual rights," says I.A. Rehman, heading the HRCP.



Asked why the commission was silent all these years, Rehman said: "The HRCP had been calling for her recovery since 2003 and when it went to the Supreme Court in 2007 her name was high on the list. The only mystery was the silence of Aafia’s family."



But the silence, explains Hamid, is due to the threats faced by families in similar circumstance. This was confirmed by Fouzia who said "all these years we were told by various government people that she was alright and is well and not to probe too much or harm would come to her’’.



In 2005, Arifa, 18, and her sister Habiba, 20, belonging to Karachi, were arrested from the northern Pakistani town of Swat. Their father, Sher Mohammad Baloch, filed a petition in the High Court and the HRCP took up their case. They were released after a year but HRCP was told by their father that their lips were sealed.



The government, under intense pressure from an incensed nation, has sought consular access to Aafia. As a first active step, two diplomats have visited Siddiqi and the media reported that she has requested a copy of the Quran, religiously appropriate food, and assurances of a fair trial.
 

justoneofmillion

Junior Member
:salam2:Thanks for the update Appa and respected older akhi munawar,we shall remain up to date to what is happening inshallah.

May allah swt shower his grace on her and grant her firdaws away from this insane world and it s evil people.

wassalaam
jameel
 

justoneofmillion

Junior Member
:salam2:Ramadan mubarak sister Aafia may allah set give you sabr and add to the strength you already have.
Ps.any update guys...

jameel
 
Top