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Britain
Free Dr. Siddiqui, UK demonstrators say
2010-08-17
[Iran Press TV Latest] A demonstration was held outside the US Embassy in London on Sunday to call for the repatriation of Pakistani neuroscientist Dr. Aafia Siddiqui.

The demonstrators say Dr. Siddiqui was unjustly convicted of attempted murder at her trial in New York.

The sentencing of Siddiqui, who was accused and found guilty of attempted murder of US agents in Afghanistan in a controversial trial, has been postponed to next month.

Siddiqui, 37, who was detained by Afghan police on July 17, 2008, was held in custody based on allegations that she had documents containing recipes for chemical weapons and explosives in her handbag, csnnews.com reported.

The following day, a team of US military officers and FBI agents in Afghanistan began interrogating Siddiqui. US authorities have alleged that during cross-examination, she grabbed a rifle and began firing at an Army captain, a claim fiercely denied by Siddiqui's attorneys based on the argument that she is too small and weak to handle the heavy US automatic rifles.

The only person injured during the episode, however, was Siddiqui, who was shot in the torso by one of the US interrogators.

On February 3, a jury unanimously found Siddiqui guilty of attempted murder, armed assault, and using and carrying a firearm.

Her attorneys argued that there was no physical evidence that Siddiqui had touched a weapon.

"I disagree with the jury's verdict. In my opinion, it is wrong. There was no forensic evidence, and the witness testimony was divergent, to say the least. This is not a just and right verdict... And my opinion is that this was a verdict that was based on fear and not fact," Siddiqui's defense attorney, Elaine Whitfield Sharp, told reporters shortly after the verdict was read on February 3.

Human rights organizations say Siddiqui was abducted in Pakistan along with her three children in 2003 and held captive for five years by the US and was interrogated and tortured while held in secret prisons.

"We think... she suffered while in secret prisons and [was] tortured for those five years while she was missing. In addition, she's been in solitary confinement for a year and a half while in US custody," Executive Director of the International Justice Network Tina Foster told Democracy Now on February 14.

"The jury was told that she was brought to the United States to face charges because she opened fire on US soldiers," said Petra Bartosiewicz, an independent journalist who wrote about Aafia Siddiqui in the November 2009 edition of Harper's Magazine.

"But what they were not told was that she'd been missing for five years and that when she went missing in 2003, she was a suspected al-Qaeda operative. And she was never charged with that in this case," she added.

Saddiqui's two youngest children, who were three months old and four years old when captured and taken into detention, are still missing.
Posted by:Fred

#3  heavy US automatic rifles

The M4 is a little over 6.5 lbs with a 30-round magazine.

Judging by my late grandmother's ability to heft a 10" cast iron frying pan whilst in a rage, I'd say that lifting a rifle is more than doable for Siddiqui.
Posted by: Pappy   2010-08-17 23:07  

#2  nice little terrorists working off Ramadan fevah
Posted by: Frank G   2010-08-17 20:27  

#1  demonstrators no doubt being british born pakistant kids ie enemy within!
Posted by: Paul2   2010-08-17 12:36  

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