Pakistan re-arrests four men acquitted in Daniel Pearl murder case
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[April 03, 2020]
By Syed Raza Hassan
KARACHI (Reuters) - Pakistani authorities
ordered on Friday four men, including a British militant, convicted of
the 2002 murder of U.S. journalist Daniel Pearl, to be detained for
three months despite a lower court's ruling to overturn their
convictions.
The High Court in the province of Sindh on Thursday acquitted the four,
including Briton Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, who was sentenced to death in
2002 for masterminding Pearl's murder. The other three were sentenced to
life.
Wall Street Journal reporter Pearl, 38, was investigating Islamist
militants in the city of Karachi, the capital of Sindh, after the Sept.
11, 2001, attacks on the United States when he was kidnapped in January
2002. He was beheaded weeks later.
The Sindh provincial government's Home Department issued the order to
arrest and detain the four before they were released from prison.
"The government of Sindh has sufficient reason that Ahmed Omar Sheikh
and Fahad Nasim Ahmed, Syed Salman Saqib, Sheikh Muhammad Adil be
arrested and detained for a period of three months from the date of
arrest (April 2, 2020),” a top official of the department said in the
order, seen by Reuters.
The official cited concern that the released men may act "against the
interest of the country".
The law to keep them in detention is one that the government has often
used to keep high-profile suspects, particularly militants, in custody
after being unable to successfully prosecute them in court.
The United States denounced Thursday's court acquittal of the four, with
the top U.S. diplomat for South Asia writing on Twitter that it was "an
affront to victims of terrorism everywhere."
SCRUTINY
Pakistan joined the U.S.-led "war on terrorism" after the Sept. 11
attacks on the United States but it has been dogged by suspicion that it
has for years secretly backed some militant factions as tools in its
decades-old confrontation with rival India.
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British-born Islamic militant Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh is surrounded
by armed police as he arrives at a court in Karachi, Pakistan March
29, 2002. REUTERS/Zahid Hussein/
Pakistan denies that but it has been under the close scrutiny of a
global watchdog on terror financing, the Financial Action Task Force
(FATF), with its frequent inability to prosecute terrorism cases a
particular concern of the agency.
The re-arrest of the four gives the government time to put together
a legal appeal against their acquittal.
A senior Pakistani government law officer told Reuters that the
state would appeal against the Sindh High Court's Thursday ruling,
which the United States welcomed.
"We welcome Pakistan's decision to appeal the verdict," acting U.S.
Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs
Alice Wells said.
Sheikh was born in Britain and enjoyed a privileged upbringing and
studied at the London School of Economics.
He was arrested in India for his involvement in the kidnapping of
Western tourists in 1994 as part of his support for Muslim
separatists battling Indian security forces in the disputed Kashmir
region.
He was one of three men released from an Indian prison after
militants hijacked an Indian airliner in late 1999 and flew it to
Afghanistan, where the then-ruling Taliban government helped
negotiate an exchange.
(Writing by Gibran Peshimam; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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