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2020-04-02 India-Pakistan
Pakistan court overturns conviction in death of Daniel Pearl
[NBC] KARACHI, Pakistan — A Pakistani court Thursday overturned the murder conviction of a British Pakistani man found guilty of the 2002 kidnapping and killing of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.

Instead, the court found Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh guilty of the lesser charge of kidnapping and sentenced him to seven years in prison.

Pearl disappeared Jan. 23, 2002 in Karachi while researching links between Pakistani militants and Richard C. Reid, who became known as the “shoe-bomber” after he was arrested on a flight from Paris to Miami with explosives in his shoes. Prosecutors said Saeed lured Pearl into a trap by promising to arrange an interview with an Islamic cleric who police believed was not involved in the conspiracy.

One of Saeed's lawyers, Khwaja Naveed, said Saeed could go free unless the government chooses to challenge the court decision. Faiz Shah, prosecutor general for southern Sindh province, said the government will appeal to the Supreme Court of Pakistan.

Saeed has already spent 18 years in prison in southern Hyderabad on death row. The seven-year sentence was expected to be counted as time served, said Naveed.

The Sindh High Court also acquitted three others accused in the case: Fahad Naseem, Sheikh Adil, and Salman Saqib, who were earlier sentenced to life in prison. The defendants were also collectively fined $32,000.

Saeed, a former student at the London School of Economics, and the others were convicted in 2002.

A videotape received by U.S. diplomats in February, 2002 confirmed that Pearl, 38, was dead. He had been beheaded.

The Pearl Project, an investigative journalism team at Washington's Georgetown University, carried out a three-year investigation into Pearl's kidnapping and death. They concluded the reporter was beheaded by Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, who was arrested in Pakistan in 2003 and later described as the architect of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the United States. Mohammad is a prisoner at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Soon after Pearl disappeared, Pakistani and U.S. news organizations received emails from the previously unknown National Movement for the Restoration of Pakistani Sovereignty. The group demanded better treatment for Taliban and al-Qaida prisoners at Guantanamo.

FBI agents traced the emails to Saeed, who admitted his role in the kidnapping during his first court appearance but later recanted.

Saeed had been arrested in 1994 by Indian authorities, accused of kidnapping three Britons and an American, who were all freed unharmed, in Indian-ruled Kashmir, Hindu India's only Muslim dominated region.

In 1999, India freed Saeed and two other militants in exchange for the release of 155 passengers and crew aboard an Indian Airlines plane hijacked to Kandahar, Afghanistan.

The Pearl kidnapping was the first of five attacks against Westerners in Pakistan in 2002. A grenade attack against a Protestant church in Islamabad on March 17 killed five people, including two Americans and the attacker, were killed.
Posted by John Frum 2020-04-02 09:00|| || Front Page|| [15 views ]  Top
 File under: al-Qaeda 

#1 Did they also overturn Pearl's death? It was a pretty heinous bit of business, as I recall.
Posted by SteveS 2020-04-02 14:01||   2020-04-02 14:01|| Front Page Top

#2 Hellfires for the judge and a MOAB for the prison. Tell the Paki's, "Anyone complaining eats a Hellfire. And no, we won't be nice and use the Ginsu ones, you get the biggest explody kind we got."
Posted by Silentbrick 2020-04-02 15:24||   2020-04-02 15:24|| Front Page Top

#3 No surprises here.
Posted by Dron66046 2020-04-02 16:21||   2020-04-02 16:21|| Front Page Top

#4 
FBI agents traced the emails to Saeed, who admitted his role in the kidnapping during his first court appearance but later recanted. “Right or wrong I had my reasons,” Saeed told the court at the time. “I think that our country shouldn’t be catering to America’s needs.” The statement was ruled inadmissible because it was not made under oath.


Interesting legal system you have here. Note to killers: Confess under oath or walk free.
Posted by European Conservative 2020-04-02 18:23||   2020-04-02 18:23|| Front Page Top

#5 I realize death squads are a bit of a slippery slope, but on the other hand, sometimes they seem like the right thing. Everything's a situation.
Posted by SteveS 2020-04-02 18:29||   2020-04-02 18:29|| Front Page Top

#6 Actually in Shrariah no member of the Herrensvolk Muslim can be sentenced to death for the murder of an Untermensch Non-Muslim
Posted by JFM 2020-04-02 21:00||   2020-04-02 21:00|| Front Page Top

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