Senators allowed to meet Aafia

Published September 17, 2008

WASHINGTON, Sept 16: The US State Department informed the Pakistan Embassy on Tuesday that a six-member delegation of Pakistani senators could meet Aafia Siddiqui at her prison in New York.

“They have accepted our request and now we are arranging the meeting,” said the embassy’s spokesman Nadeem Kiani.

Mr Kiani, however, said that the US administration had rejected another request to allow the senators to meet Pakistani prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay prison camp in Cuba.

Ms Siddiqui, who was brought from Afghanistan last month and was charged with attacking US officials during an interrogation, is lodged in a maximum-security prison in Brooklyn, New York.

The Senate delegation, led by Senator Mushahid Hussain, will now be able to meet Dr Siddiqui if they agree to follow prison rules and procedures and if she also agrees to meet them.

The six senators, however, will have to seek advance security clearance for the meeting.

The embassy said it had already started the process for security clearance and did not foresee any hindrance.

Asked if Dr Siddiqui would also agree to meet the delegation, Mr Kiani said: “I don’t see why not.”According to court documents released this week, Dr Siddiqui has been diagnosed with chronic depression. Federal Judge Richard Berman had ordered Ms Siddiqui’s psychiatric examination after she refused to appear in court to protest the humiliating strip searches she is subjected to even before a meeting with her lawyer.

The US media recently quoted a New York Bureau of Prisons psychologist, Dr Diane McLean, as saying that Ms Siddiqui suffered from “depressed mood, anxiety, ruminative thoughts concerning her son’s welfare, poor sleep, and moderate appetite”. She is also suffering from hallucinations.

The psychiatrist wrote: “She also reported seeing her daughter in her cell, and was unable to apply appropriate reality testing to this phenomenon.”

The Pakistani delegation was actually coming to visit the Guantanamo prison camp but it is not clear if it would still want to do so.

The State Department has told the embassy that the delegation can still visit the camp to see prison facilities but cannot meet prisoners.

Opinion

Editorial

Online oppression
Updated 04 Dec, 2024

Online oppression

Plan to bring changes to Peca is simply another attempt to suffocate dissent. It shows how the state continues to prioritise control over real cybersecurity concerns.
The right call
04 Dec, 2024

The right call

AMIDST the ongoing tussle between the federal government and the main opposition party, several critical issues...
Acting cautiously
04 Dec, 2024

Acting cautiously

IT appears too big a temptation to ignore. The wider expectations for a steeper reduction in the borrowing costs...
Competing narratives
03 Dec, 2024

Competing narratives

Rather than hunting keyboard warriors, it would be better to support a transparent probe into reported deaths during PTI protest.
Early retirement
03 Dec, 2024

Early retirement

THE government is reportedly considering a proposal to reduce the average age of superannuation by five years to 55...
Being differently abled
03 Dec, 2024

Being differently abled

A SOCIETY comes of age when it does not normalise ‘othering’. As we observe the International Day of Persons ...