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Along
the rocky border between North Waziristan and Afghanistan, Pakistani
soldiers along with FBI agents were on high alert. The collapse
of resistance at Tora Bora, the cave and tunnel complex commanded
by Bin Laden to the south of the border crossing, had led to increased
border activity as well as heightened border patrolling.
In traditional Pakistani garb, his face masked by a
heavy beard, Mohammed Esa, a local tribesman, may have thought he
had little to fear as the area's tribal inhabitants have freely
crossed the border for years, particularly as many have inter-married
across the Durand line. But this time around, it was a different
scenario.
A suspicious border guard, unsatisfied with Esa's answers, took
him into custody and within hours he was handed over to FBI sleuths
for further questioning. Esa again failed to satisfy his interrogators,
who mistook him for an Al-Qaeda operative and whisked him away to
the infamous Guantanamo Bay centre in Cuba.
Esa, a homepathic doctor, had earlier gone to Mazar-e-Sharif to
collect his wife, who had gone to show her newborn baby to her parents.
Esa was still there, when America's war against terrorism broke
out in Afghanistan. He stayed with his in-laws for a couple of days
and knowing the dangers of the journey home, he chose to return
alone. He was arrested at the border, sent to Guantanamo Bay, while
his family was told nothing about his whereabouts.
Esa's disappearance led his family to conclude that he had perished
in US's massive bombing campaign in Afghanistan and they lost all
hope of ever seeing him alive again. Then Mohammed Azim, his father,
a resident of Kotika village in the Frontier province bordering
Afghanistan, received a letter from the US. Azim, who knew no one
in America, tore open the letter which was from none other than
his son, Esa, now Prisoner GPC, 160-camp X-ray.
Shouting with jubilation, Azim ran home with the news: 'Esa is alive.'
"Dearest father, mother and sisters, I'm alive. I'm presently
being imprisoned by the Americans in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and will
be released soon because I'm innocent," read the letter.
According to Azim, his 28-year old son Esa had nothing to do with
either the Taliban or Al-Qaeda. He was a homeopathic doctor who
had a hashish addiction. To comfort his aged parents, Esa wrote
that they should not worry about him, as he was in good health and
had given up his hashish habit. "After I was arrested I was
detained for a couple of days. Later on, they shaved off my beard,
changed my clothes, closed my eyes and ears, chained me and brought
me to Guantanamo Bay in an aeroplane." According to him, along
with other prisoners, he was detained in a small six by eight foot
cell where he was given a copy of the Holy Quran and was allowed
a thirty-minute walk outside once a week. Esa has recently been
shifted from Camp X-ray to another camp, Delta, where the Americans
are busy constructing an additional 204 cells for detaining future
prisoners. Esa is just one of the dozens of Pakistanis, who were
handed over to FBI agents and whisked away to Guantanamo Bay without
their families being informed.
America has a long history of interfering in the internal affairs
of other countries. In the 80s, the US Congress passed laws authorising
the FBI to exercise federal jurisdiction overseas when a US national
is murdered, assaulted, or taken hostage by terrorists, or when
US interests are attacked. The Comprehensive Crime control Act of
1984 created a new section in the US criminal code for hostage-taking,
and the Omnibus Diplomatic Security and Anti-terrorism Act of 1986
established a new extra-territorial statute pertaining to terrorist
acts conducted abroad against US citizens and interests. Upon approval
by the host country, FBI has the legal authority to deploy its agents
to carry out extra-territorial investigations in the host country
where the crime has been committed, enabling the US to prosecute
"terrorists for crimes committed against the US."
When Pan-Am flight 73 was hijacked at Karachi international airport
on September 5, 1986, with 380 passengers on board, for the first
time, Pakistani authorities allowed FBI agents to search the aircraft
for forensic evidence and to interview hostages. During the siege,
some 22 people were killed, including two US citizens and at least
120 more were injured. Pakistani authorities arrested and sentenced
all five hijackers to hang for their crime, none were handed-over
to the US because Pakistani law prohibits the extradition of its
citizens to the US following conviction for the same offence. That
was just the beginning of what was to follow.
Then on June 15, 1997, in an unprecedented move, Pakistani authorities
allowed FBI agents not only to carry out a raid on Pakistani soil,
but also to extradite Ramzi Yousaf, an Islamic militant who was
wanted by the US in the bombing of the Trade Center in New York,
during Benazir Bhutto's second stint in power. Ramzi was arrested
from Capital-Inn, Islamabad on a tip-off. Though there was no law
that allowed FBI agents to carry out raids on their own and capture
and take suspects from Pakistani soil to the US for trial, the Americans
were given carte blanche to do as they pleased. Though the incident
got much negative publicity, the only official explanation given
was that Ramzi had been involved in an assassination attempt on
the then Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto. Second time around, not
only were FBI agents allowed to conduct a major swoop in the Shalimar
hotel in Dera Ghazi Khan but they also whisked away Pakistani citizen,
Mir Aimal Kasi, in a special C-141 flight to the US without the
knowledge of the interior minister. Says Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain,
then federal minister for interior during the second stint of Nawaz
Sharif: "The orders were passed directly by Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif, I was not informed about the details of the operation."
Kasi, 35, was found guilty in the killing of two CIA agents on February
8, 1993, in Virginia. He managed to flee to Pakistan and was arrested
on a tip-off after a four-year long global hunt and the posting
of a 3.5 million dollar reward. Kasi is believed to have sought
a shelter at the house of a Khosa Sardar who was asked by a mutual
friend to provide Kasi shelter in accordance with the Baloch tradition.
Kasi had been living in a village in Dera Ghazi Khan in winter,
shifting to Ramzak, a village located in the tribal belt of the
NWFP in summer. Ironically, the same person who arranged refuge
for Kasi was, allegedly, also involved in betraying him to the FBI.
According to reports, special FBI commandos raided room 312 of the
Shalimar hotel in the early morning of June 15, 1997. The hotel
security guards tried to intervene, but they were giving a stern
warning by one of the gun-toting men, who introduced himself as
Brigadier Bokhari. "This is an important government mission,
don't try to interfere," he said. After Kasi was bundled into
a car, the hotel management immediately informed the police, who
chased the raiding parties' cars which were speeding towards the
airport. As the police van drew closer, the commandos threatened
to kill the policemen. The police finally gave up the chase near
the airport and were witness to a C-141 aircraft taking off from
Dera Gazi Khan airport.
According to legal experts, there is no law that allows
the US to carry out raiding operations on Pakistani soil and take
their targets to the US for trial, by-passing the law of the land.
"Even if an extradition treaty is signed with any country,
this doesn't mean that the people arrested can be taken away to
other countries without being tried in Pakistan courts," says
Ms. Noor Naz Agha, a human rights activist and a senior advocate.
According to her, anyone accused of a crime is supposed to be tried
in the local courts. The concerned country is first supposed to
prove the charges in court, and only then can the accused be extradited
- and that too, for crimes on foreign soil.
After the September 11 attack on the World Trade Center, the US
administration launched "Operation Infinite Justice" which
was not just restricted to removing the Taliban government. With
an open-ended agenda prepared by the US Department of Justice, US
forces were empowered to eliminate all militant outfits perceived
as a threat to the US and western interests, particularly Al-Qaeda,
ban trading with those financial institutions who support these
outfits and organisations, arrest anyone providing them with scientific,
technical or medical assistance, remove those governments involved
in helping these organisations, arrest or remove any important person
in any government supporting these organisations and close down
all NGOs supporting terrorist outfits socially or in welfare-oriented
projects.
With the international coalition on the war against terror in place,
Pakistan has totally subjugated itself to US interests. The FBI
have been given a free hand to operate on Pakistani soil. State-of-the-art
monitoring facilities, including cell-satellite-and-ground phones,
and the setting up of the high-tech PICSES system at the major Pakistani
airports to check international travellers are a few examples of
how the US has encroached on Pakistan's sovereignty.
The FBI has also been allowed to install Close-Circuit Cameras (CCC)
at selective spots in Karachi to monitor movements of suspects.
In the first phase, some 3,216 CCCs will be installed in Karachi,
while more than 13,000 cameras will be installed later in other
parts of the country. According to some sources, the FBI has already
identified locations in Karachi, where they believe Al-Qaeda operatives
are presently hiding while trying to reorganise their network. Meanwhile,
in the year-long FBI operation, dozens of Pakistani and foreign
militants, alleged to be working for Al-Qaeda, have been arrested
from Pakistani soil and taken to unknown locations. According to
US officials, some 598 people from 42 nations are being held at
the Guantanamo Bay camp, while hundreds of others are being held
in dozens of other unspecified camps. Most of these militants were
arrested from Afghanistan soon after the fall of the Taliban regime,
while others were rounded up in different raids, carried out across
Pakistan.
Ironically, many of those arrested and detained at the infamous
Guantanamo Bay camp, were arrested on false charges with no proper
investigation of their alleged Al-Qaeda links. Recently, US officials
released seven Pakistanis detained at Guantanamo Bay for one year,
finally concluding that they were not terrorists. "If you don't
want them for intelligence, and you don't want them for law enforcement,
and you don't need them off the street, then let's be rid of them,"
said an arrogant US Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld. The US decision
meanwhile, came in the wake of a year-long outcry from international
human rights groups and foreign governments about the indefinite
detention, without charges, of hundreds of people apprehended abroad
in America's war on terror.
According to interior ministry officials, there are only a few dozen
FBI agents presently working in Pakistan who assist them in investigations.
Independent reports, however, confirm the presence of some 1500
FBI agents who have allegedly conducted raids on various Islamic
militants hideouts. Surprisingly, in many of these operations, the
local police were not even allowed to take part, while in other
cases, even if local police participated in the operations, they
were not allowed to interrogate the captured militants who were
whisked away to unknown locations. For example, Zainul Abidin Mohammed
Hussain, a Saudi-born Palestinian, popularly known as Abu Zubaydah,
was arrested in Faisalabad on March 28, 2002, in a shootout in which
two militants were killed. The operation is believed to have been
carried out directly by the FBI. Likewise, when the local police
conducted raids in an uptown locality of Karachi on September 11,
and arrested Ramzi Al-Shaiba along with four associates, they were
directly handed over to FBI officials, without any interrogation.
Police officials maintain that there are many legal hitches if local
police carry out the raids. "Since we are a civilian agency,
we are bound to abide by court rulings. Since the ISI or FBI are
not civilians outfits, it is always easier for them to deny even
the arrest of anyone in the name of the state secret acts,"
says a senior police official.
With FBI officials given a free hand to operate as they choose,
many Pakistani individuals and institutions have come under the
purview of the war on terror. The list of the Pakistani individuals
who have been arrested and grilled by the FBI include Pakistani
nuclear scientist, Dr. Bashiruddin, Lashkar-e-Toiba chief, Hafiz
Saeed, Jaish-e-Mohammed chief, Maulana Masood Azhar, Mufti Rasheed
Ahmed, Commodore (retd) Arshad Ali Chaudhry, Maulana Fazlur Rahman
Khalili, Mirza Yousuf Baig, Humayun Niaz and a host of others. The
last and most publicised case was that of Dr. Amir Aziz, noted orthopaedic
surgeon, who was picked up from Lahore on October 21 on charges
of making chemical weapons and anthrax for Al-Qaeda. "Some
names become public knowledge because they might be well-known figures,
there are dozens of others who have been arrested who no one knows
about," says an insider.
Dr. Amir operates several free clinics in Lahore and has a close
relationship with the Sharif family. He was appointed the first-ever
chief executive of a government hospital in the Punjab. Dr. Amir
has also remained a health advisor to the federal government until
General Musharraf's takeover. According to reports, Dr. Amir was
summoned several times by the FBI who were investigating his alleged
links with Al-Qaeda. Interior minister, Moinuddin Haider, alleged
that Dr. Aziz's activities were not restricted to his profession
and he maintained close links with Al-Qaeda and made frequent visits
to Afghanistan during the Taliban regime. "Pakistani agencies
have substantial evidence against Dr. Aziz's activities which go
against the national interests of the country," said Haider.
Surprisingly, despite repeated directives from the Lahore High Court,
the government refused to produce him in court keeping him incommunicado
even when the court passed an order directing the government either
to produce Dr. Aziz in court, charge him or set him free. According
to recent reports, the government was under tremendous pressure
from the US to extradite Aziz. However, given the massive public
outcry within the country, it refused to hand him over, finally
releasing him under mysterious circumstances. Sources close to him
confide that he has been told not to speak of his ordeal.
This is the second case in the current year in which the government
has not acquiesced to US orders. When Sheikh Omar was arrested and
charged with the kidnap-slaying of Wall Street Journal reporter,
Daniel Pearl, the US authorities demanded that he be handed over
for investigation in the US. Government officials promised them
that Omar would be convicted in Pakistan, and allowed FBI agents
to interrogate him while he was in custody. Says a senior police
official, "We pleaded with the US to agree to the deal in which
Omar would be convicted in Pakistan, because handing him over to
the US would give militants reason to retaliate which would jeapordise
Pakistan's security environment."
Local institutions that have been targeted by the FBI include Al-Rasheed
Trust, Rabita Trust, Tameer-e-Nau and a few others. "We have
no problem if any individual or institution involved in any mischievous
activity is tried under the local law of the land, but to hand them
over to foreign agents in the name of international cooperation
is illegal," argues Dr. Khalid Mehmood Soomro, provincial general
secretary of Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Islam (F), Sindh.
"The manner in which the government has allowed the FBI to
meddle in the internal affairs of the country allowing citizens
to be picked up and handed over to foreign agencies has compromised
the sovereignty of Pakistan," says one political observer.
"The interference of foreign troops in the internal affairs
of the country clearly shows we are incapable of running our country
so we might as well franchise the country to the Americans and at
least bring the country's fragile economy to a solid footing."
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