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Friday, 24 September 2010

Pakistani scientist sentenced in US






A female Pakistani scientist has been sentenced to 86 years in prison for trying to kill US officers in Afghanistan.

Aafia Siddiqui's sentence was handed down by a federal New York court on Thursday.

"It is my judgement that Dr Siddiqui is sentenced to a period of incarceration of 86 years," Judge Richard Berman said.

Siddiqui denounced the trial and said an appeal would be "a waste of time. I appeal to God".

The neuroscientist was convicted by a US jury in February on charges she grabbed a US warrant officer's rifle while she was detained for questioning in Afghanistan's Ghazni province and fired at FBI agents and military personnel as she was wrestled to the ground.

Siddiqui, branded "Lady Qaeda" by some in the US press, was wounded by return fire but recovered and was brought to the US to face trial.

Afghan police said she was carrying containers of chemicals and notes referring to mass-casualty attacks on New York landmarks when they arrested her in 2008.

Pakistan protests

Her conviction has been widely criticised in Pakistan, where Siddiqui is believed to have been innocent and mistreated in US detention.

Rallies were staged in several Pakistani cities on Thursday. In Karachi, about 400 members of the Jamaat-e-Islami group gathered, carrying pictures of Siddiqui and chanting slogans against the US and its justice system.

The group tried to march towards the US consulate, but the police stopped them before they got too close.

Siddiqui's sister, Fauzia Siddiqui, later went to the consulate to submit a written message which said "Free Aafia Now".

Though Siddiqui was not convicted of terrorism, the government has argued that she is a cold-blooded radical who deserves a "terrorism enhancement" under federal sentencing guidelines that would guarantee a life term.

"She made it explicit, through her own words and her conduct, her intention to kill Americans, to cause 'death to Americans,"' prosecutors wrote in court papers.

Prosecutors said notes she carried at the time of her detention referenced "a 'mass casualty attack' ... NY CITY monuments: Empire State Building, Statue of Liberty, Brooklyn Bridge," and another musing how a dirty bomb would spread more fear than death.

They claimed the notes, along with the fact that she was carrying sodium cyanide, showed she was not an accidental menace.

"Mentally ill and caught in the crossfire of a war that is no longer fought on conventional battlegrounds, Dr Siddiqui's self-destructive behaviour got her shot once in the abdomen, charged with attempted murder and ... convicted of the same," the defence wrote.

Authorities claim she returned to her native Pakistan in 2003 after marrying an al-Qaeda operative related to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the admitted mastermind of the September 11, 2001, attacks.

Stories differ on her whereabouts between 2003 and her arrest in 2008. Her family says she was held at the US military's Bagram airbase in Afghanistan. But her first husband says she spent five years on the run with her children, before being arrested in 2008 with her adopted son in Afghanistan.

Testifying in her own defence at her trial, Siddiqui claimed she was tortured at a "secret prison" before her detention. Charges that she purposely shot at soldiers were "crazy", she said. "It's just ridiculous."

Source:Agencies

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