Pakistan court orders release from prison of mastermind in Daniel Pearl
case
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[February 02, 2021]
By Asif Shahzad
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan's Supreme
Court ordered the release from prison on Tuesday of a British-born
militant who had been convicted in the kidnapping and murder of U.S.
journalist Daniel Pearl by al Qaeda and Pakistani Islamist militants in
2002.
In a decision that is expected to draw criticism from the United States,
the court recommended that Ahmad Omar Saeed Sheikh be transferred to a
government safe house as a stepping stone to his full release after
spending 18 years on death row.
"He should be moved to a comfortable residential environment, something
like a rest house where he can live a normal life," said Justice Omar
Ata Bandyal.
Bandyal headed a panel of three judges that reviewed the case, following
a petition from the government after the court upheld last Thursday a
lower court's decision to acquit Sheikh and three accomplices of all
charges except abduction.
The court said Sheikh should be kept at a secure location under a
"supervision and some surveillance," his lawyer Rauf Ahmad Sheikh told
reporters.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken "reinforced" Washington's concern
over the case in a telephone call on Friday with Pakistan's Foreign
Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi.
Pearl's family had also petitioned for the Supreme Court to reverse the
acquittal so that "Sheikh and co-conspirators are brought to justice for
the kidnapping and murder of Daniel Pearl," Faisal Siddiqi, a lawyer for
the family, said.
On assignment for the Wall Street Journal in the months after al Qaeda
9/11 attacks on the United States, Pearl was kidnapped in Karachi and
later beheaded. The militants videoed his execution.
Al Qaeda's number three leader Khalid Sheikh Mohammed later confessed to
killing Pearl, while Sheikh, a former student at the London School of
Economics, played key role in luring the journalist into a trap with the
help of other Pakistani militants.
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A policeman walks past the Supreme Court building in Islamabad,
Pakistan October 31, 2018. REUTERS/Faisal Mahmood
Captured in Pakistan in 2003, Mohammed is being held at the U.S.
detention centre at Guantanamo Bay, on the island of Cuba, where he
is a awaiting trial on multiple counts, and could face the death
penalty.
Sheikh's fortunes changed last year, when a high court decided only
the kidnapping conviction should stand, commuting his death sentence
to seven years in jail, which he had already served.
Sheikh's father, Ahmad Saeed Sheikh, attended Tuesday's hearing.
"It is not a complete freedom. It is a step toward freedom," he told
Reuters Television.
The judge said family members should be allowed to visit Sheikh once
he was moved from prison.
The terms of Sheikh's release will become clearer once a written
order is made public.
"Even if court orders for release, the government has prepared other
cases to charge him under a terrorism act and for treason," said
Hassan Abbas, a Washington based international security professor.
"The bigger challenge for Islamabad will be pressure from the U.S."
(This story corrects to say Pearl's family, not Sheikh's family in
para 7)
(Reporting by Asif Shahzad and Charlotte Greenfield in Islamabad;
Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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