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Daniel Pearl's killer Omar Saeed Sheik's death sentence overturned in Pakistan

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KARACHI: The hearing of appeals filed by convicts in the murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl was put off in the Sindh High Court (SHC) due to the absence of the defence lawyers.

A two-judge bench, headed by Justice Salahuddin Panhwar, fixed the matter on February 20, directing the defence lawyer to appear and argue on the appeals.

The lawyer representing Ahmed Omar Sheikh was absent during the proceedings, leading to adjournment of the matter.
The main accused, Sheikh, who was sentenced to death on charges of kidnapping and killing the US journalist and his three accomplices – Fahad Naseem, Syed Salman Saqib and Sheikh Muhammad Adil – who were sentenced to life imprisonment, had appealed against their conviction and sentences in 2002.

Pearl, the South Asia bureau chief of the Wall Street Journal, was kidnapped on January 23, 2002 from Karachi and later beheaded by his captors.

Somali journalist killed in front of children

The anti-terrorism court had sentenced Sheikh to death on charges of kidnapping and killing the US journalist. His three accomplices were awarded life imprisonments and a fine of Rs500,000 each by the ATC in Hyderabad on July 15, 2002.

The court had also directed the convicts to pay Rs2 million to the victim’s widow, Marianne Pearl.

The convicts had filed appeals in the high court on July 19, 2002, pleading to nullify their sentences and conviction.

In the meantime, the state had also filed an appeal seeking enhancement of the three co-accuseds’ life terms to capital punishment.

Prolonged ‘solitary confinement’

In August, 2014, the SHC had ordered the prison authorities to provide proper facilities to Sheikh, who was confined in the ‘solitary death cell’ being a condemned prisoner.

Sadia Rauf, the convict’s wife, had taken the provincial home and prison authorities to court for allegedly denying basic facilities to her husband in violation of the law.

Previously, the prison authorities had informed the convict that all the facilities the convicts was entitled to had been provided to him in the jail as per the Jail Manual.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1624033/1-1624033/
 
A former British public schoolboy convicted of killing US journalist Daniel Pearl has launched an appeal against his death sentence in Pakistan.

Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, 46, has been on death row for almost 18 years after being found guilty of kidnapping and beheading the Wall Street Journal reporter in 2002.

A gruesome video of 38-year-old Mr Pearl being murdered by the Al Qaeda fanatic prompted global revulsion but also inspired similar killings by Islamic State.

Lawyers for Sheikh – who attended the same Forest School in East London as former England cricket captain Nasser Hussain – are calling for the High Court in Karachi to rule that his conviction was flawed.

Sheikh, from Wanstead, East London, is believed to have become radicalised while studying at the London School of Economics and fought as a jihadi in Bosnia and Pakistan.

Mr Pearl contacted Sheikh while investigating links between Pakistan and British ‘shoe bomber’ Richard Reid.

They agreed to meet in Karachi in January 2002, but the journalist was snatched by Sheikh.

The execution is now believed to have been carried out by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the Al Qaeda chief who was the architect of the 9/11 attacks.

If his legal challenge fails, Sheikh will be granted permission to appeal to Supreme Court judges.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-appeals-against-death-sentence-Pakistan.html
 
Daniel Pearl: Pakistan overturns convicted man's death sentence

Pakistan has overturned the death sentence of the man convicted of killing US journalist Daniel Pearl, defence lawyers have told reporters.

British-born Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, who has been in prison since 2002, has had his sentence reduced to seven years, said lawyer Khawaja Naveed.

Three other men given life sentences over the killing have been acquitted by the Sindh High Court and released.

Pearl, who worked for the Wall Street Journal, went missing in January 2002.

He had been researching Islamist militant activity in Karachi in the wake of the 11 September 2001 attacks on the US.

A month later, authorities said he had been killed after receiving video footage of his beheading.

Sheikh was convicted shortly afterwards by an anti-terrorism court, but there have long been questions over the case.
A group of US journalists, including former colleagues of Pearl, said in 2011 that they believed Sheikh had not carried out the beheading.

The Pearl Project alleged the beheading was carried out by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who is being held in Guantanamo Bay, accused of being behind the 9/11 attacks.

Mr Naveed told Reuters on Thursday that the murder charges had not been proven, so his client's sentence had been reduced to seven years for the kidnapping.

"Omar has already served 18 years, so his release orders will be issued sometime today. He will be out in a few days," he said

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia...at-apps.in-app-msg.whatsapp.trial.link1_.auin
 
There is NO justice in Pakistan. Is that right to say?

No there isn't, you are correct.

Countless innocent people were cheaply sold to Americans by Pakistani establishment immediately after 9/11 due to alleged links to terrorism. They were subjugated to torture in prisons like Guantanamo. None shall ever walk free and taste justice. Those who got rich due to dollars can live lavishly while others would never truly know what happened to their loved ones.

In regards to this topic did you actually read the news or just the title of this thread?

Did you read this part?

Sheikh was convicted shortly afterwards by an anti-terrorism court, but there have long been questions over the case.
A group of US journalists, including former colleagues of Pearl, said in 2011 that they believed Sheikh had not carried out the beheading.

The Pearl Project alleged the beheading was carried out by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who is being held in Guantanamo Bay, accused of being behind the 9/11 attacks.

Mr Naveed told Reuters on Thursday that the murder charges had not been proven, so his client's sentence had been reduced to seven years for the kidnapping.

"Omar has already served 18 years, so his release orders will be issued sometime today. He will be out in a few days," he said

Now this guy Omar Saeed is in noway innocent and involved in kidnapping but he isn't guilty of any murder.

A small description of The Pearl Project:

The Pearl Project is an innovative investigative journalism project at Georgetown University. The original investigation, conducted in 2007 through 2010, explored the kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in 2002. The 31-thousand word report was published by the Center for Public Integrity.

The project included graduate students from Georgetown's School of Foreign Service, Journalism graduate students, and Georgetown undergraduates from a variety of majors. Students in the seminar investigated the questions of who really killed Pearl and why they killed him.

http://pearlproject.georgetown.edu/

People who have a lot more love for the deceased then you and I could ever have personally acknowledge that their extensive research shows that accused can't be the killer.

Is it the shame and inferiority complex that causes us to not think for ourselves and just quietly repeat whatever is supposed to be the right thing?

If a man never committed the murder then is it just to hang him regardless in hope to get approval of those who can and will never be pleased?
 
I believe Omar Sheikh although a kidnapper and a criminal was one of the many victims of mighty security forces of Pakistan. Pakistani establishment was caught by surprise when 9/11 happened. Musharraf had no spine to stand his ground in front of Bush. In their effort to save face and please Americans, Pakistani authorities intentionally manipulated different cases to get the verdict they wanted.

Why is the terrorist being released?

Good question!

Read on, if you are sincerely interested to find an answer.

The findings of The Pearl Project published in 2011:

pg 14

In their haste to close the case, Pakistani authorities knowingly used perjured testimony to pin the actual act of murder on Omar Sheikh and his three co-conspirators. While the four were involved in the kidnapping plan and certainly were culpable, they were not present when Pearl was murdered. Others, who were present and actually assisted in the brutal beheading, were not charged.

pg 15

Pakistani authorities let a key informant, admitted guard Fazal Karim, go free and failed to follow other potential leads.

pg 15

Omar Sheikh, who orchestrated the kidnapping plot, had contemplated bargaining over ransom demands for Pearl’s freedom,

pg 15

False and contradictory evidence presented in Pakistan’s kidnapping trial raises serious doubts the convictions of Sheikh and his three associates will stand up in currently pending appeals.

Omar Saeed was not even in the same city when the journalist was murdered. American and Pakistani officials intentiaonally ignored information that would undermine their effort to paint Omar Saeed as the killer.

pg 20

Pakistani investigators passed on word of this informant (Karim) to Bennett, the State Department’s security officer, but, U.S. officials say, they refused to let him interview their prisoner. Karim’s emergence, it turns out, was a problem. By that time, police already had a prime suspect in jail named Ahmad Omar Saeed Sheikh, the radical who indeed orchestrated the kidnapping but was out of the picture — in fact, was in another city — at the time Pearl was beheaded. Karim’s account threw a wrench into the strategy Pakistani police and prosecutors had mapped out to convict Omar Sheikh and three codefendants. Pakistani authorities, in a series of decisions which American officials accepted, didn’t bring charges against Karim and failed to follow up his leads to avoid drawing attention to his information and undermining the court case against Sheikh and his co-defendants

Please the master at all costs. A typical pattern in Pakistan's reaction after 9/11

pg 21

By some accounts, the Pakistanis didn’t want to jeopardize an already problematic case against Sheikh at a time when they were under pressure to show Washington that they were being tough on terrorism.

pg 22

Had investigators pursued earlier clues such as Karim’s, they might have discovered what the Pearl Project’s student-reporters can now put on the record: four men tried and convicted of Pearl’s murder in Pakistan were involved in the kidnapping but not in the killing. Those responsible for the murder have not yet faced justice.

pg 90

On July 15, 2002, the judge issued the verdict against Sheikh and his three co-defendants: guilty.

The judge found that all four had “committed murder of Daniel Pearl by slaughtering and caused the evidence of the dead body to disappear.” He sentenced Sheikh to death and his co-defendants to life imprisonment. In his 54-page decision, the judge essentially ignored the discrepancies between the police and defense timelines. For instance, he stated that although the FBI computer expert testified that he had received the laptop on February 4, 2002, “the examination logically could have been conducted by him” between February 11 and 15.

Nearby, AFP reporter Mazhar Abbas broke the story of the convictions, but, like other Pakistani journalists, he was privy to the secret of the witness, Fazal Karim, that police and prosecutors had decided to hide. “Omar was not there for the killing. That’s why they didn’t bring anyone else in that was involved in the killing — to not undermine Omar’s arrest,” Abbas told the Pearl Project.

Outside the jail, Bashir, the defense lawyer, told reporters he rejected the verdict, claiming that Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf had buckled to pressure from the U.S. to get a guilty verdict.

pg 91

If a guilty verdict were the intent, prosecutors had certainly achieved it — and in the face of considerable contradictory evidence. While Sheikh orchestrated the plot to kidnap Pearl and his three co-defendants were guilty of aiding him, none were actually present for the murder.

The actual killers were still free in Pakistan. Indeed, missing in the court room — and unmentioned by either prosecution or defense — were the names of the three men who investigators now say murdered Daniel Pearl

Those familliar with the case had long predicted that Omar Sheikh will be freed at some point. Why? Because the evidence against him is phony.

pg 99

Omar Sheikh and his three associates were convicted in the summer of 2002 for Pearl’s kidnapping and murder and sit in jail to this day; despite their conviction for Pearl’s murder in Pakistani court, the evidence of their direct role remains unconvincing.

Attorneys for Sheikh and his three co-defendants have filed numerous appeals that have been postponed repeatedly, and people familiar with the case told the Pearl Project that Sheikh, at least, will be freed at some point.

Bashir Ahmad, defense attorney for the four men, told the Pearl Project, “I believe the case will be reversed on appeal, as soon as the appeal shall be heard, because there is absolutely no concrete evidence against the accused."

Download link http://pearlproject.georgetown.edu/pearlproject_march_2013.pdf

Official site of The Pearl Project: http://pearlproject.georgetown.edu/

These are the finding of years of investigation by The Pearl Project. A project which wasn't started by some terrorist sympathizer rather by those who lost their beloved son and friend. It was started by those whose thirst for justice for their beloved is far stronger than any of us. If they have the dignity to call right from wrong despite their loss, then why are we in such a rush to close our eyes and ears and accept what is handed out to us in a vain attempt to be accepted?

Now why does all this matter? He is a stupid terrorist so good riddance right?

Yes, it matters!

It matters because if we truly claim to stand for justice then our standard for justice should stand above our emotional feelings, bias and prejudice. Justice can't be for one side only, it must be for both.

It matters because at the end of the day the term "terrorist" should not cloud our judgment. In the world there are basically killers, murderers, rapists and other criminals who harm innocents. Their motivations for such heinous crimes might be personal, egoistic, racist, religious or of political nature. It doesn't matter. In the end what matters is their crime, the act they have committed and the innocents they have harmed.

In a just society the punishment should fit the crime. Always.

Another thing to consider: This type of cases are nothing new. Pakistan's security forces are notorious for turning the innocent into guilty and the guilty into innocent, if the price is right.

This criminal already had a strong criminal case against him for kidnapping but the police authorities still felt the need to manipulate the evidence and make sure he gets the verdict of being the murderer so that they could close the case and wouldn't have to do their job properly. They have this immense power to manipulate court verdicts. Now imagine how many countless innocents are sitting behind bars just because the police needed the case to be closed.

Today it's them the terrorists, the animals, the butchers, the bad guys so we feel indifferent and even glad. But what if tomorrow the authorities use the same power to falsely harm on of our beloved ones. Who would be our helper? Where could we run to and demand justice? Who would even listen to us? Is there an institute in place which keeps the security forces and their powers in check?

This whole problematic reminds me of this beautiful poem:

First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a socialist.

Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.​

I love Pakistan, it's my native country. However it shouldn't stop us from turning a blind eye when clear evidence of mischievous behavior by the authorities is presented. For Pakistan to become a better place such atrocities and injustices by the security forces needs to be scrutinized and called out for it to become a more secure and just place.
 
The guy who helped catch one of the most notorious terrorists Osama hiding in Pakistan is still languishing in Jail I think where these killers are being let go.

Anyways what is surprising is one of the killers is a Brit Pakistani. I thought all these guys were villagers and tribals but a guy brought up in Britain wow, I mean that is a huge concern.
 
Wow this is shocking law and order situation.

Yes it is very shocking.

A kidnapper was wrongfully condemned in 2002 for murder by manipulating the evidence and sentenced to death. At least by 2011 it was well established by multiple independent international investigators that the accused is innocent of murder. His defending lawyer had their appeals postponed repeatedly. Finally after 9 more years and a total of 18 years in prison justice has been served and the wrong verdict withdrawn.
 
as always, the Pakistani law and order is a joke.

THe dog is a murderer.


See, the current Pakistani Interior minister is Brigadier Ijaz Shah. This guy was in the intelligence bureau, and Benazir mention that if she was ever assassin one of the person to be investigated should be him.

Anyways, when Omar Sheikh surrendered, he surrendered himself to Brigadier Ijaz Shah. Ijaz Shah than concealed this from the Karachi police for a week.

Now Ijaz Shah is our interior minister, and we know why this dog is getting released
 
Being gullible or an idiot in a harmless way is fine.

However how is the biggest takeaway from this article not the fact that one of these blood thirsty killer was a Brit Pakistani? That’s got to be a bigger concern if you don’t agree with the guy, shouldn’t it?

I think you are new to this field.

Your findings are not extraordinary. Many famous terrorists have well educated background. The current leader of Al-Qaeda is a medical doctor. The ring leader of 9/11 hijackers Mohammed Atta was studying in Germany and doing his masters there. Etc.
 
I think you are new to this field.

Your findings are not extraordinary. Many famous terrorists have well educated background. The current leader of Al-Qaeda is a medical doctor. The ring leader of 9/11 hijackers Mohammed Atta was studying in Germany and doing his masters there. Etc.

Osama bin Laden was extremely rich. He was from a wealthy family
 
One of the most interesting and authentic piece on Omar Sheikhs activities are told in detail by a writer known as Omar Shahid Hamid. His book, the Prisoner.
 
I think you are new to this field.

Your findings are not extraordinary. Many famous terrorists have well educated background. The current leader of Al-Qaeda is a medical doctor. The ring leader of 9/11 hijackers Mohammed Atta was studying in Germany and doing his masters there. Etc.

Then that’s obviously a problem.

I mean poverty, unemployment to take these radical steps is usually used as a defense even though I personally know a lot of folk from humble beginnings who live and enjoy a perfectly honest living.

I don’t think their education, upbringing or wealth is a line of defense, it just highlights a deeper problem.

I can wrap my head around a kid growing up in a village in Afghanistan or Pakistan cutting of people’s heads being brought up in such an environment. It doesn’t make it right but at least there is a reason but what makes a guy living in UK living a decent life commit such heinous acts like cutting of a guys head with whom he doesn’t even have anything personal. That seems to be a larger and dangerous issue
 
He murdered someone - he is getting away with it. Should be hanged.

Did he do the beheading? If not he isnt a murderer.

But many countries will still put him awsy for a life time for being an accomplice.
 
Pakistan court overturns conviction in Daniel Pearl killing

A Pakistani court has overturned the murder conviction of a British Pakistani man found guilty of the kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in 2002.

Instead, the court on Thursday found Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh guilty of the lesser charge of kidnapping and sentenced him to seven years in jail.

One of his lawyers, Khwaja Naveed, said he could go free unless the government chooses to challenge the court decision.

"The murder charges were not proven, so he [court] has given seven years for the kidnapping," Naveed told Reuters by telephone.

"Omar has already served 18 years, so his release orders will be issued sometime today. He will be out in a few days," Naveed added.

At least four people were convicted in connection with Pearl's murder, including the British-born Sheikh, who was sentenced to death in 2002 for masterminding the murder.

A two-member bench of the High Court of Sindh province issued the order in the city of Karachi, Naveed said, adding that the three others, who had been serving life-sentences in connection with the case, had been acquitted.

"We haven't had a very strong reaction [to the verdict] given the fact there is this [coronavirus] pandemic, and all news is focused on that," Al Jazeera's Kamal Hyder, reporting from Islamabad, said.

According to Hyder, the court said the prosecution had not been able to prove its case, in which most of the witnesses were policemen.

In a statement later on Thursday, the Wall Street Journal said: "We continue to seek justice for the murder of Daniel Pearl. Danny was a cherished colleague and we will always honor his memory and service."

Pearl was investigating armed groups in Karachi after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States when he was kidnapped in January 2002. Video emerged a few weeks later of his murder.

A Sindh prosecutor said he would consider appealing against the court decision.

"We will go through the court order once it is issued, we will probably file an appeal," Faiz Shah, the provincial prosecutor general, told Reuters by telephone.

Sheikh was arrested in India in the 1990s for his involvement in the kidnapping of western tourists in 1994.

He was one of three men released from an Indian prison after armed groups hijacked an Indian airliner in late 1999 and flew it to Afghanistan, where the then-ruling Taliban regime helped negotiate an exchange.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...ion-killing-daniel-pearl-200402065653842.html
 
Pakistan court set to free four accused in kidnapping and murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl

A Pakistani court has overturned the conviction of four men, including the death sentence of a British Pakistani man, in connection to the 2002 kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.

All four had been found guilty of Pearl's kidnapping, and British-born Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh was sentenced to death in 2002 for masterminding the murder of the US journalist.

The court acquitted all four on charges of murder and kidnapping for ransom, and found Sheikh guilty only on the charge of abduction.

He has been in jail for 18 years awaiting the outcome of an appeal.

Pearl, 38, was investigating Islamist militants in Karachi after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the US when he was kidnapped in January 2002.

His case grabbed headlines globally, after a video of his beheading emerged weeks after Pearl was abducted.

"No evidence has been brought on record by the prosecution to link any of the appellants to the murder of Pearl and as such all the appellants are acquitted of murder," said a two-member bench of the Sindh High Court.

Sheikh was sentenced to seven years on the abduction charge, but he is expected to be freed given time already served.

"Omar has already served 18 years, so his release orders will be issued sometime today. He will be out in a few days," defence lawyer Khawaja Naveed said.

A US State Department official said on Thursday the courts decision was "an affront to victims of terrorism everywhere".

A senior Pakistani government law officer said via phone that the state would appeal against the Sindh High Court's verdict.

Pakistan's Foreign Office said the issue pertained to the Ministry of Interior "who will be looking at the judgment in detail".

The Ministry of Interior did not respond to a request for comment.

The convictions in Pearl's murder case had been brought into question after another defendant, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, one of the alleged masterminds of the September 11 attacks, told a US military tribunal in 2007 that he beheaded Pearl.

In a statement, the Wall Street Journal said it continued to seek justice for the murder of Pearl.

Australian media now reporting it:

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/worl...pearl/ar-BB125S27?li=AAgfYrC&ocid=mailsignout

____________________________________________________________________________________

I am quite surprised by this decision from Pakistan, considering how the world views Pakistan and its connection to terrorism, this definitely wont be helpful for the FAFT cause.
 
Pakistan court set to free four accused in kidnapping and murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl

A Pakistani court has overturned the conviction of four men, including the death sentence of a British Pakistani man, in connection to the 2002 kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.

All four had been found guilty of Pearl's kidnapping, and British-born Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh was sentenced to death in 2002 for masterminding the murder of the US journalist.

The court acquitted all four on charges of murder and kidnapping for ransom, and found Sheikh guilty only on the charge of abduction.

He has been in jail for 18 years awaiting the outcome of an appeal.

Pearl, 38, was investigating Islamist militants in Karachi after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the US when he was kidnapped in January 2002.

His case grabbed headlines globally, after a video of his beheading emerged weeks after Pearl was abducted.

"No evidence has been brought on record by the prosecution to link any of the appellants to the murder of Pearl and as such all the appellants are acquitted of murder," said a two-member bench of the Sindh High Court.

Sheikh was sentenced to seven years on the abduction charge, but he is expected to be freed given time already served.

"Omar has already served 18 years, so his release orders will be issued sometime today. He will be out in a few days," defence lawyer Khawaja Naveed said.

A US State Department official said on Thursday the courts decision was "an affront to victims of terrorism everywhere".

A senior Pakistani government law officer said via phone that the state would appeal against the Sindh High Court's verdict.

Pakistan's Foreign Office said the issue pertained to the Ministry of Interior "who will be looking at the judgment in detail".

The Ministry of Interior did not respond to a request for comment.

The convictions in Pearl's murder case had been brought into question after another defendant, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, one of the alleged masterminds of the September 11 attacks, told a US military tribunal in 2007 that he beheaded Pearl.

In a statement, the Wall Street Journal said it continued to seek justice for the murder of Pearl.

Australian media now reporting it:

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/worl...pearl/ar-BB125S27?li=AAgfYrC&ocid=mailsignout

____________________________________________________________________________________

I am quite surprised by this decision from Pakistan, considering how the world views Pakistan and its connection to terrorism, this definitely wont be helpful for the FAFT cause.

Not sure sure what FATF has to do with this? Does FATF mandate death by hanging in its remit?
 
Not sure sure what FATF has to do with this? Does FATF mandate death by hanging in its remit?

Bro, surely this will not help Pakistan's already damaged image due to being connected to terrorism. Surely FAFT would look into things like this since Pakistan is on their list for terror financing ?.
 
Daniel Pearl murder: Pakistan commutes death sentence of key accused

A Pakistani court on Thursday overturned the death sentence for British-born militant Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, who had been convicted over the 2002 killing of American journalist Daniel Pearl.

Pearl was the South Asia bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal when he was abducted and beheaded in Karachi in 2002, while researching a story about Islamist militants.

At least four people were convicted in connection with Pearl's murder, including Sheikh, who was sentenced to death in 2002 for masterminding the killing. Three of the other co-accused had received life sentences.

On Thursday, Sheikh's death sentence was reduced to a 7-year jail sentence, his defense lawyer Khawja Naveed told AFP. The three others were acquitted.

"The murder charges were not proven, so he has been given seven years for the kidnapping," Naveed, told Reuters by telephone.

A two-member bench of the High Court of Sindh province issued the order in the city of Karachi on Thursday, Naveed added.

Release imminent

Sheikh is expected to be released shortly, as he has been in jail for 18 years.

Pearl traveled to Pakistan after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States and was kidnapped in January 2002.

A graphic video showing Pearl's decapitation was later delivered to the US consulate in Karachi.

Wrong men convicted?

Nine years later, an investigation led by Pearl's friend and former Wall Street Journal colleague Asra Nomani and a Georgetown University professor made chilling revelations, claiming that the wrong men were convicted for Pearl's murder.

The report claimed the reporter was murdered by Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, the alleged mastermind of the September 11, 2001, attacks, not Sheikh.

Mohammed — better known as KSM — was arrested in Pakistan in 2003 and is being held in Guantanamo Bay.

A US psychologist who interviewed KSM said the prisoner had told him that he had beheaded Pearl.

http://glbnews.com/url.html?p=https...utes-death-sentence-of-key-accused/a-52988481
 
KARACHI: The Sindh government on Friday invoked the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO) law to keep the four men suspected of murdering US journalist Daniel Pearl in detention for another 90 days.

The orders were issued under Section 3 of the MPO a day after the Sindh High Court overturned the death penalty of prime suspect Omer Saeed Sheikh and acquitted his three accomplices in the case.

According to a notification issued by the Sindh Home Ministry, the release of Omer Saeed Sheikh, Fahad Naseem, Syed Salman Saqib and Sheikh Mohammad Adil could jeopardise the law and order situation in the province, thus necessitating their continued detention.

Talking to Geo News on the case, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said we are surprised at the timing of the verdict and added that the order shall be challenged at a higher forum.

Earlier, the United States had expressed concern on the acquittal of all four suspects from terrorism charges, terming the development an insult to victims of terrorism everywhere.

In a statement issued today, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Alice G. Wells said, “We welcome Pakistan’s decision to appeal the verdict. Those responsible for Daniel's heinous kidnapping and murder must face the full measure of justice.”

The SHC had on Wednesday completely acquitted three suspects of being involved in the kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter back in 2002 and overturned the death penalty given to Omer Saeed Sheikh for murdering Pearl and instead handed him a seven-year imprisonment sentence for kidnapping the journalist.

Read also: SHC commutes death penalty of prime accused, acquits three accomplices

A two-judge bench of the high court, headed by Justice Mohammad Karim Khan Agha, had reserved its judgement last month after hearing the arguments of the appellants and the state counsel.

"The court has commuted Omar's death sentence to a seven year sentence," a defence lawyer had told Reuters by telephone after the verdict was announced. "The murder charges were not proven, so he has given seven years for the kidnapping."

"Omar has already served 18 years, so his release orders will be issued sometime today. He will be out in a few days," he had said.

A Sindh prosecutor said he would consider appealing against the court decision.

"We will go through the court order once it is issued, we will probably file an appeal," Faiz Shah, the provincial prosecutor general, told the news agency by telephone.

British national Omer Sheikh had been sentenced to death for kidnapping and killing Daniel Pearl by a court in 2002, and his three accomplices – Fahad Naseem, Syed Salman Saqib and Sheikh Mohammad Adil – were sentenced to life imprisonment with a fine of Rs500,000 each.

The counsels for the suspects, Rai Bashir and Khawaja Naveed Ahmed, had argued that the prosecution had failed to prove its case beyond reasonable doubt. "Ahmed and the three other suspects had neither aided, abetted, or participated in the alleged crime of kidnapping for ransom," it was argued.

They submitted that the prosecution witnesses in the case against Shiekh and others were mostly policemen, and their testimonies could not be relied upon. They said there was no eyewitness to the crime and the prosecution relied upon very weak circumstantial evidence for conviction.

The deputy prosecutor-general, Saleem Akhtar, however, had supported the anti-terrorism court's judgment and submitted that the prosecution had proved its case against the appellants beyond any shadow of a doubt while requesting the court to dismiss the appeals.

After hearing the arguments of all the parties to the case, the SHC bench acquitted three and commuted the sentence of the prime accused.

Daniel Pearl murder case

Pearl, a US national and the South Asian bureau chief of American publication The Wall Street Journal, was investigating militants in Karachi after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

He was kidnapped on January 23, 2002, in Karachi and later beheaded by his captors when their demands regarding his release were not met. A video emerged a few weeks later of his murder.

CPJ expresses concerns

In a statement, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) expressed disappointment with the verdict and asked for it to be appealed.

“The Committee to Protect Journalists is deeply disappointed to see justice in the murder case of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl denied by a Pakistani court today,” said Steven Butler, CPJ’s Asia programme coordinator.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/280684-daniel-pearl-murder-case
 
Not sure sure what FATF has to do with this? Does FATF mandate death by hanging in its remit?

These Indians know nothing about this case but know a lot about the FATF.

FATF is the main topic in Endian media
 
Ronaldo and Romalli - dont post here any any more if you are going to abuse

Consider this a warning or bans will follow
 
Lol another U-turn .Pakistan re-arrests Ahmed Omer Saeed Sheikh,
and others convicted in murder of American Journalist Daniel Pearl.
https://t.co/kcDGcjbwfU

So you had a problem when they let him go and now you still have a problem that they re arrested him?

Also, it was because of public safety concerns. He's been arrested for 3 months and coz of the appeal
 
Seriously I am confused now, released him and put him in jail again? What is going on :inti
 
Releasing Him- State Policy

Re-arresting seems like an economic policy to combat all the grey lists.
 
Pakistan is playing this game from long. They release terrorist and then put house arrest/arrest them for FATF. If court release him, how can authorities arrest him. Can't authorities under civil court.
 
Pakistan is playing this game from long. They release terrorist and then put house arrest/arrest them for FATF. If court release him, how can authorities arrest him. Can't authorities under civil court.

Not sure how the court systems work in different parts of the world but this is what happened - the court in Pakistan took a decision and its been implemented. Those looking to malign Pakistan (usual suspects) will come here and throw in their 2 cents.
 
Then why did authorities arrest him, since he is freed by court. I thought authorities has to oblige a civil court. [MENTION=93712]MenInG[/MENTION]
 
Pakistan interior ministry in a statement says four men, including Ahmed Omar Sheikh, accused in the Daniel Pearl murder have been re-arrested in a preventive measure — and an appeal against their acquittals will be filed soon.
 
Then why did authorities arrest him, since he is freed by court. I thought authorities has to oblige a civil court. [MENTION=93712]MenInG[/MENTION]

KARACHI: The Sindh government on Friday invoked the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO) law to keep the four men suspected of murdering US journalist Daniel Pearl in detention for another 90 days.

Clearly Pak Govt does not feel comfortable with this decision.
 
KARACHI: The Sindh government on Friday invoked the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO) law to keep the four men suspected of murdering US journalist Daniel Pearl in detention for another 90 days.

Clearly Pak Govt does not feel comfortable with this decision.

Just a general knowledge question but why isn’t this being handled by the Pak judiciary at a central level anyways( is it Supreme Court??? ) . We are talking about a tragic international incident and the involvement of notorious terrorists.

Why is this being handled by the Sindh state or regional Courts ?

Yes it is strange and not the norm in atleast few counties I have lived in.
 
Just a general knowledge question but why isn’t this being handled by the Pak judiciary at a central level anyways( is it Supreme Court??? ) . We are talking about a tragic international incident and the involvement of notorious terrorists.

Why is this being handled by the Sindh state or regional Courts ?

Yes it is strange and not the norm in atleast few counties I have lived in.

That I have no answer for but even in the US I have seen smaller courts go against the Fed Gov - maybe something like that.
 
Acquittals in Daniel Pearl murder will be challenged in top court, FM Qureshi assures US

Minister for Foreign Affairs Shah Mahmood Qureshi on Saturday said that the Untied States government's apprehensions on the Sindh High Court's decision to acquit four people earlier convicted in the kidnapping and murder of US journalist Daniel Pearl were only "natural", adding that the decision will be challenged in the apex court.

The SHC had on Thursday acquitted the four, including prime suspect Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, who was sentenced to death in 2002 for masterminding Pearl's murder. The other three had been sentenced to life.

However hours after the verdict, the Sindh Home Department issued an order late Thursday night to arrest and detain the four before they were released from prison, citing sufficient reason to believe that these men may act “against the interest of the country”.

Yesterday's verdict however did not sit well with the United States, with the State Department condemning the overturning of the convictions and terming the decision “an affront to victims of terrorism everywhere”.

“Those responsible for Daniel’s heinous kidnapping and murder must face the full measure of justice,” senior US diplomat Alice Wells wrote on Twitter on Thursday.

Wall Street Journal reporter Pearl, 38, was investigating militants in Karachi after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States when he was kidnapped in January 2002. He was beheaded weeks later.

Foreign Minister Qureshi reiterated on Friday that the Sindh government would appeal the decision.

"Yesterday, the Sindh government had ordered the detention of the four suspects for 90 days under the Public Safety Act," Qureshi said, while adding that the decision to appeal the high court decision had already been taken.

"The forum of appeal exists, we are going to use it and then see if higher courts decide to keep the SHC's decision intact or set it aside," Qureshi said.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1546365/a...challenged-in-top-court-fm-qureshi-assures-us
 
ISLAMABAD: The Sindh government challenged the Sindh High Court (SHC) verdict in the Daniel Pearl kidnapping and murder case before the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

In its April 2 order, the SHC had overturned the conviction of Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh for killing the South Asia Bureau Chief of The Wall Street Journal. The SHC had also acquitted three other accused namely Fahad Naseem, Sheikh Adil and Salman Saqib, who had been earlier sentenced to life imprisonment by an Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) of Karachi.

Daniel Pearl, 38, was doing research on religious extremism in Karachi when he was abducted in January 2002. A graphic video showing his decapitation was delivered to the US consulate a month later. Subsequently Omar Sheikh was arrested in 2002 and sentenced to death by the trial court.

Sindh Prosecutor General Dr Fiaz Shah moved the appeal before the top court on the grounds that the ‘last seen evidence’, ‘impersonation and ‘identification parade’ was proved against the accused persons and maintained concurrently by the trial court.

Moreover, the appeal pointed out that the video showing the committing of murder of the WSJ reporter had been verified by a public official (an expert from PTV) and was never challenged.

Appeal filed in SC against overturning of Omar Sheikh’s conviction

The collective proof along with the clear and categorical confessional statements of the accused and the co-accused (Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh), the acquittal and modification of sentence by the high court was not sustainable and was liable to be set aside, the appeal urged the Supreme Court.

Similarly, the evidence of natural and independent witnesses confirmed the demand of ransom made by the accused — a fact also stood proven through documentary evidence. As such the acquittal of the accused as well as the modification of sentence to the extent of co-accused is illegal and unlawful.

The accused persons acted to achieve nefarious designs and committed the offences that fall under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 and this factum was also accepted and admitted by the high court in its judgement, the petition highlighted. But the high court took a glaring contradictory view, while acquitting the accused and modifying the sentence of the co-accused — a decision which could not be sustained in the eye of law and thus caused serious miscarriage of justice, it stated.

According to the appeal, this was a fit case for conviction in the light of the 1996 Supreme Court judgement in the Bahadur versus the State, but the SHC ignored the dictum and erred in dealing with the legal question of burden of proof as the prosecution had safely discharged the burden to prove the guilt of the accused by producing cogent and sufficient evidence.

Moreover, the appeal said, the accused persons failed to produce any material to create a doubt against the evidence produced by the prosecution. Rather the co-accused during remand categorically admitted his guilt before the trial judge that he committed the offences in league with other accused who also voluntarily confessed their involvement before the trial court.

Hence the offences were proven that all accused in connivance with each other committed the crime and they were vicariously liable for committal of all offences, including the murder of Daniel Pearl, the appeal contended.

Likewise, the admission of guilt by the co-accused during remand before ATC Karachi is part of judicial proceedings and thus legal sanctity is attached thereto under Article 91 of the Qanun-i-Shahadat Ordinance, 1984, the SC was informed. But the high court did not consider this important fact in true perspective thereby seriously misled itself to the conclusion arrived at in April 2 verdict, the Sindh government contended in its appeal.

It said the high court also failed to appreciate the aggravating factors involved in the case. On the contrary the acquittal of the accused and modification of death sentence in the absence of the mitigating circumstance caused serious miscarriage of justice and violates the principles settled down by the apex court, it argued.

The high court also misconceived the confessional statements to be inadmissible in evidence where no rebuttal came on record against such confessional statements nor any of the accused filed any complaint against the recording of such confessional statement.

In the absence of this irrefutable piece of evidence, the discarding of confessional statement on the ground of delay of 27 days and element of presumptive inducement was completely unwarranted, the appeal argued, adding that the certificate attached with the confessional statement of the accused carried weight and legal sanctity.

According to the appeal, the high court neither referred to nor considered the established impersonation of the co-accused Ahmed Omer Saeed Sheikh alias/Aka Bashir, corroborated through identification parade. The voluntary judicial confessions made by the accused Salman Saqib and Fahad Nasim before the competent court were retracted on flimsy premises, yet the high court while giving undue weightage to such retraction did not consider the principles settled by the apex court.

As per 2019 Supreme Court Shaukat Ali’s case, the petition highlighted, even a retracted confession could form the basis for conviction if found voluntarily and truthful. The rule laid down by the Supreme Court was not followed in the Daniel Pearl case, resulting in grave miscarriage of justice, it argued.

The SHC did not appreciate that there was overwhelming incriminating evidence on record against the accused connecting them to the offences with which they were charged, it said, adding that they had committed offences they were charged for in league with each other with their common intention and object and were liable to be punished accordingly.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1551526/sindh-govt-challenges-high-court-verdict-in-daniel-pearl-case
 
The parents of murdered US journalist Daniel Pearl have filed an appeal with Pakistan's Supreme Court to reverse a ruling overturning the convictions of four men in the case.

Pearl was kidnapped and beheaded in 2002 while investigating Islamist militants in Karachi, Pakistan.

Last month a court in Karachi overturned the death sentence of the man convicted of masterminding the killing, and acquitted three others.

The ruling was widely condemned.

Pearl was the Wall Street Journal's Asia bureau chief when he was abducted and killed. A graphic video of his killing was sent to the US consulate a month later.

In a video statement, his father Judea Pearl said: "We have filed an appeal of this decision to the Pakistan Supreme Court.

"We are standing up for justice not only for our son, but for all our dear friends in Pakistan so they can live in a society free of violence and terror and raise their children in peace and harmony."

Their petition adds to one already filed by prosecutors.

Shortly after their acquittal the four men - including the convicted mastermind Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh - were re-arrested. They will be held for at least three months as the appeals play out.

Sheikh's death sentence had been reduced to seven years in prison for kidnapping.

The Committee to Protect Journalists voiced its support for the appeal, and said that releasing the four men in the case "would only add to the threats facing journalists in Pakistan and deepen Pakistan's reputation as a haven for terrorists".

What happened to Daniel Pearl?
Pearl went missing in January 2002.

He had been researching links between Islamist militant activity in Karachi and Richard Reid, who tried to blow up a passenger plane using bombs hidden in his shoes.

According to prosecutors, Sheikh lured him to a meeting with an Islamic cleric. The two had built up a relationship discussing concerns about their wives, who were both pregnant at the time.

Almost a month later, a video showing the 38 year old's beheading was sent to the US consulate in Karachi.

Pearl's son, Adam, was born in May 2002.

Sheikh was convicted of Pearl's murder in July 2002 by an anti-terrorism court, and has been on death row since.

Who is Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh?

Sheikh was born in London in 1973, where he attended public school before going on to study at the London School of Economics. He did not graduate, failing to return after driving aid to conflict-wracked Bosnia after his first year.

He was arrested for involvement in the kidnapping of four tourists - three British and one American - in Delhi in 1994.

Sheikh was released from prison as part of demands by militants who hijacked a plane in 1999.

According to news agency Reuters, police in India later accused him of transferring money to one of the militants who flew a plane into the World Trade Center on 9/11

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-52518015
 
After seeing the video of Daniel Pearl's parents, I think Omar Sheikh should stay in prison for life.
 
SC rejects Sindh govt’s plea to suspend SHC verdict in Daniel Pearl case

The Supreme Court (SC) on Monday rejected the Sindh government’s plea to suspend Sindh High Court’s (SHC) judgement regarding the release and acquittal of accused in the murder case of American journalist Daniel Pearl.

During the hearing, Justice Manzoor Malik said the petition seeking suspension of the judgment cites irrelevant provisions.

“First of all, the kidnapping of Daniel Pearl must be proved, Justice Malik said. Evidence must prove that the abductee was Daniel Pearl. The Sindh government claims that a conspiracy was hatched in Rawalpindi. What conspiracy took place in Rawalpindi must also be proved with evidence.”

“We should be provided a complete record of the case,” Justice Malik remarked. “I want to look at all the records so that I can understand all the points.”

The apex court ordered the counsel representing the provincial government, Farooq H Naek, to submit the detailed record before the court for the case to be further heard. The hearing was then adjourned indefinitely.

The Sindh government had sought time to submit the record of the trial court.

The judge added that the court has to check whether the confession and identification parade was in accordance with the law or not.

“The facts cannot be ignored,” he added.

On April 2, 2020, the SHC had commuted the death sentence of Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh – the man convicted of kidnapping and murdering American journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002 – to a seven-year sentence.

The SHC had also acquitted three others who had been awarded life imprisonment in the case. The order came almost two decades after they were found guilty and subsequently jailed.

The slain journalist’s parents had approached the Supreme Court against the Sindh High Court’s verdict.

Two criminal petitions had been filed by renowned lawyer Faisal Siddiqi on behalf of Pearl’s parents – Ruth Pearl and Judie Pearl -against the acquittal and release of the four accused.

“The decision by the Sindh High Court to free the men in the murder of Daniel Pearl is a complete miscarriage of justice. It is a defining case for the Pakistani state and its judicial system, involving freedom of the press, the sanctity of every life, freedom from terror and the manifestation of a welcoming and safe Pakistan to the world. Rarely has any court case embodied and risked such fundamental values,” said the lawyer.

The petition states that the SHC “failed to note that this was a brutal murder” and a result of international terrorism, and the principle of the standard of proof, as well as the benefit of the doubt in cases of international terrorism, has to be applied keeping in the context that the nature and type of evidence available in such terrorism cases cannot be equated with cases involving non-terrorism crimes.

“Therefore, it is obvious and apparent that the impugned judgment is clearly erroneous because it is fundamentally based on a misinterpretation of law and misreading of the entire record of Special Case No.26 of 2002,” stated the petition, adding that the impugned judgment is liable to be set aside.

It further alleged that the SHC erred in holding that no evidence has been brought on record by the prosecution to link any of the accused persons to the murder of Pearl.

“It is submitted that a bare perusal of the entire record of Special Case No.26 of 2002 reveal that there is a plethora of incriminating evidence, both forensic as well as oral, which proves that murder of the deceased person has been committed and that all the accused persons have aided and abetted the murder of the deceased person.”

The petition further maintained that the SHC further erred in failing to take into consideration that Ahmad Omar Sheikh has a history of involvement in international terrorism.

“It is also submitted that SHC erred in failing to consider the proforma of confessional statements and the examination-in-chief of the judicial magistrate, wherein it has been categorically stated that the confessional statements have been made voluntarily,” it added.

The petition further states that keeping in mind the arguments, the judgment is fundamentally based on a “misinterpretation of the law” and on a “misreading and selective reading” of the entire record of the case.

Siddiqi further added in the petition that the provincial high court’s judgement has itself held that the present case is a “very sensitive case where a foreign journalist was murdered in the most brutal circumstances that would have spread terror amongst other foreigners in Pakistan and the journalist community as a whole”.

“Therefore, in light of its own finding and the strong incriminating evidence establishing the case for kidnapping for ransom of the deceased person, the Sindh High Court has erred in giving the aforementioned findings,” the petition submitted in the apex court further maintains.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/223299...s-plea-suspend-shc-verdict-daniel-pearl-case/
 
ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court has asked the Sindh government to furnish a complete report comprising all evidence along with its appeal which has challenged the Sindh High Court’s (SHC) April 2 decision of overturning the conviction of Ahmed Omer Saeed Sheikh for allegedly kidnapping and killing Daniel Pearl — the slain journalist of The Wall Street Journal.

Headed by Justice Mushir Alam, a three-judge SC bench on Monday also asked senior counsel Faisal Siddiqui, representing Ruth and Judea Pearl — the mother and father of the slain reporter — to prepare and complete the record of the entire case history in all aspects.

SC urges counsel for slain journalist’s parents to gather complete record of case history

Justice Manzoor Ahmed also asked Farooq H. Naek, who was representing the Sindh government, as well as Prosecutor General Sindh Dr Fiaz Shah, to complete the paper book by furnishing all documents since many documents were missing.

Justice Ahmed also stated that the State had to prove through evidence that the slain journalist was abducted, as well as the conspiracy behind his kidnapping was hatched and the evidence that he was murdered by the accused.

The State will also have to satisfy the court whether the trial court had ever awarded sentence under Section 302 of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) which deals with murder as well as Section 120 PPC that deals with the punishment for hatching conspiracy.

The State will also show whether these provisions were ever challenged before the SHC or not, Justice Ahmed observed.

The court is seized with three appeals by the Sindh government and two independent appeals by the parents of Daniel Pearl against the acquittal of Omer Shaikh and three others. The matter to be adjudicated was whether to admit these appeals and grant leave to appeal, whether to suspend the high court judgement of releasing the accused and whether to allow the parents to separately pursue their appeals in this case.

The court is likely to resume the hearing after the court vacations which usually end in the first week of October.

Referring to suspension of the sentence, Faisal Siddiqui explained that since there was no substantive hearing or decision, it was common that the Supreme Court in capital punishment cases only conducts a substantive hearing after the complete record was before it. Therefore, it is clarified that neither any verbal nor written request for suspension of judgement was rejected by the Supreme Court, he explained.

Daniel Pearl, 38, was the South Asia Bureau Chief for The Wall Street Journal. He was abducted in Karachi in January 2002.

Later, a graphic video showing his decapitation was delivered to the US consulate after a month of his abduction.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1560672/sindh-govt-told-to-file-complete-report-with-appeal-in-pearl-case
 
Top court to hold urgent hearing of Daniel Pearl murder case tomorrow

The Supreme Court has admitted the Sindh government ‘s plea and fixed the urgent hearing of American journalist Daniel Pearl murder case on Monday.

The provincial government had challenged the Sindh High Court (SHC) verdict wherein it had commuted the death sentence of Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh – the man convicted of kidnapping and murdering Wall Street Journal journalist in 2002 – to a seven-year sentence.

The SHC had also acquitted three other accused namely Fahad Naseem, Sheikh Adil and Salman Saqib, who had been awarded life imprisonment in the case by an Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) in Karachi.

Hours after their acquittal, the provincial government ordered three months detention of four accused, which is due to expire on July 2.

Later, the Sindh government and slain journalist’s parents approached the apex court against the SHC verdict.

However, three judge special bench of the top court led by Justice Mushir Alam on June 1 refused to suspend SHC judgement and adjourned the hearing until summer vacations.

Now, the Sindh prosecutor general has moved an application for early hearing of the case given the sensitivity of the matter.

“The respondent and co-respondents have terrorised people in a horrific way with deprived indifference to human suffering, slaughtering brutally a US citizen on one hand and have also degraded and defamed stated of Pakistan globally,” the plea read.

It is also stated that the accused in the case did not deserve any mercy and should be dealt in accordance with law.

The advocate general also cautioned in the application that “there is serious apprehension of act of terrorism” if the accused are released from the custody after the expiry of detention period.

A three-judge bench headed by Justice Mushir Alam will take up the provincial government’s petition for early hearing tomorrow (Monday).

The Sindh prosecutor general and senior lawyer Farooq H Naek are expected to appear before the bench to represent the Sindh government.

Daniel Pearl, 38, was doing research on religious extremism in Karachi when he was abducted in January 2002. A graphic video showing his decapitation was delivered to the US consulate a month later. Subsequently, Omar Sheikh was arrested in 2002 and sentenced to death by the trial court.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/225223...nt-hearing-daniel-pearl-murder-case-tomorrow/
 
SC rejects Sindh govt's plea to suspend acquittal of accused involved Daniel Pearl murder case

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court (SC) on Monday rejected the Sindh government's plea to suspend the acquittal of the accused involved in the Daniel Pearl murder case.

A three-member judge bench of the apex court, presided by Justice Mushir Alam, presided the hearing during which the Sindh government's prayed upon the court that the accused are international terrorists, one of whom has been working with a terrorist organisation in India and the other in Afghanistan.

"If the accused are released, there could be serious consequences," the lawyer said.

To this, the counsel of the accused said that how such a statement can be made before the SC. "The accused have not seen the sun for 18 years, there must be some fear of God in the government."

Justice Yahya Khan Afridi remarked that "keep in mind that the accused have been acquitted by a court, after the acquittal of the accused, how can you call them terrorists?"

Justice Alam questioned that how can the order of acquittal be suspended without a solid reason?

"A decision can only be suspended when there a flaw in it. If the government wants, it can extend the MPO (Maintenance of Public Order."

The apex-court adjourned the hearing till September.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/225252...-of-accused-involved-daniel-pearl-murder-case
 
Sindh govt extends detention of four persons linked to murder of US journalist Daniel Pearl till Sep 30

The Sindh government on Thursday issued an order to detain four persons convicted in the kidnapping and killing of a US journalist, whose sentences were overturned by the Sindh High Court (SHC), earlier in April.

Two officials in Central Prison Karachi and the Sindh Home Department, which issued the order, told Dawn.com, while speaking on condition of anonymity, that a British Pakistani citizen, Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, as well as the co-accused, Fahad Naseem, Sheikh Adil and Salman Saqib, will be detained at the prison till September 30.

The move comes days after the Supreme Court paved the way for Sheikh's release by rejecting a government request for an immediate hearing of an appeal against his acquittal in the 2002 murder of US journalist Daniel Pearl.

Superintendent of Karachi Central Prison, Hasan Sehtoo, told AP that the four men will remain in custody until September 30 under a law that allows authorities to detain any suspect for up to one year. He quoted the order as saying that the men’s release would threaten public safety.

The order of detention has been issued under Section 11-EE of the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997. It empowers the government “to arrest or detain suspected persons.”

Saeed’s lawyer, Mahmood Sheikh, said he was not aware of an extension of his client’s detention. Under an earlier court order, the appeal against the man’s acquittal will be heard on September 25.

Saeed was found guilty of murder and kidnapping in the 2002 death of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl and sentenced to death.

In April, the SHC overturned his murder conviction and sentenced him to seven years for the kidnapping. He has already spent 18 years in prison on death row and his seven-year sentence for kidnapping was counted as time served.

Pearl’s parents have also filed an appeal before the Supreme Court, challenging the lower court’s ruling. Pearl disappeared on January 23, 2002 in Karachi while researching links between Pakistani militants and Richard C. Reid, who became known as the “shoe bomber” after he was arrested on a flight from Paris to Miami with explosives in his shoes.

A videotape received by US diplomats in February 2002 confirmed that Pearl, 38, was dead. He had been beheaded.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1566592/s...der-of-us-journalist-daniel-pearl-till-sep-30
 
KARACHI: The provincial Home Department on Wednesday extended the detention period of the accused persons in the murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl by three months.

Persons accused of murdering the American journalist include Omar Saeed, Fahad Naseem, Salman Saqib and Shaikh Mohammad.

The department said that the persons have been detained under the Anti-Terrorism Act’s Section 11 Triple E. It also adds that the government fears that if the accused are released, they may create a new terrorist network.

The provincial government has filed an appeal in the Supreme Court of Pakistan over the Sindh High Court's (SHC) ruling in the Daniel Pearl case, whereby three of the four accused were acquitted and a death sentence of the prime accused was commuted.

The appeal against the SHC's April 2 ruling was filed by the provincial prosecutor-general.

The provincial government has requested Pakistan's top court to declare the SHC's ruling null and void. It has also petitioned for the death penalty of the prime accused, Omer Saeed Sheikh, to be restored. Sheikh's sentence had been converted into a seven-year imprisonment earlier.

The Sindh government has further requested the apex court to restore life sentences of Sheikh's three accomplices as well.

The three appeals by the provincial government include all four accused as a party to the petition.

On April 2, the SHC had acquitted three of the accused of kidnapping and murdering Pearl back in 2002. It had also converted the prime accused Sheikh's death penalty into a seven-year imprisonment sentence.

A two-judge bench of the high court — headed by Justice Mohammad Karim Khan Agha — had reserved the judgement in March after hearing the arguments of the appellants and the state counsel.

"The court has commuted Omar's death sentence to a seven year sentence," a defence lawyer had told Reuters by telephone. "The murder charges were not proven, so he has given seven years for the kidnapping."

"Omar has already served 18 years, so his release orders will be issued sometime today. He will be out in a few days," he had said.

Later, however, Sindh had invoked the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO) law to prevent all suspects in the Daniel Pearl murder case from walking free, ordering they be kept in detention for another 90 days.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/298116-de...ed-in-daniel-murder-case-extended-by-3-months
 
KARACHI: The Sindh High Court on Wednesday issued notices to provincial authorities and others on a petition challenging the second notification about extending the detention of four men set free by the SHC after setting aside the trial court order in the abduction and murder case of US journalist Daniel Pearl.

Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, commonly known as Omar Shaikh, Fahad Naseem, Salman Saqib and Sheikh Adil through their counsel moved the SHC against a fresh notification issued by the provincial authorities on July 1 for their further detention for three months. Earlier, they had also challenged the first notification issued in April for their 90-day detention.

A two-judge bench headed by Justice Mohammad Iqbal Kalhoro issued notices to the advocate general of Sindh and the prosecutor general of Sindh as well as to the home department and other respondents for Aug 20.

The counsel for the petitioners contended that the provincial authorities had ordered detention of the petitioners under the Maintenance of Public Order Ordinance, 1960 for a period of three months on April 2 shortly after the judgement of the SHC on their appeals.

Sindh govt believes if the militants are released they may carry out acts of terrorism

He further submitted that on July 1, the provincial home department had issued another notification extending their detention for another three months under Section 11-EEE (powers to arrest and detain suspected persons) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997.

According to the second notification, the names of these four individuals were included in the Fourth Schedule under the ATA on the recommendations made on June 26 by the provincial police officer and the additional inspector general of the Counter Terrorism Department for their alleged affiliation with terrorist originations and involvement in terrorist acts.

According to the notification, the provincial government was of the view that the apprehension existed that they may indulge in networking and terrorism if released and therefore required to be detained under Section 11-EEE of the ATA for a period of three months.

The lawyer argued that the petitioners had been behind bars for the past 20 years and despite being acquitted by the court they had not been set free yet.

He maintained that the detention was not in accordance with law and pleaded to set aside the July 1 detention notification.

On April 2, a two-judge bench of the SHC acquitted all the appellants from charges of murder and kidnapping for ransom and only found main accused Ahmed Omar Sheikh guilty of abducting the slain journalist and sentenced him to seven years in prison. However, the sentence had been completed since the convict had already spent around 18 years in detention.

An antiterrorism court in Hyderabad had sentenced Sheikh to death in 2002 for kidnapping and murdering the 38-year-old South Asia bureau chief of The Wall Street Journal for ransom and co-accused were awarded life term for helping the main convict.

The provincial government and the parents of the slain journalist have already challenged the SHC order before the Supreme Court and on June 29, the apex court had refused to entertain the Sindh government’s request to suspend the SHC order.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1572782/s...nst-detention-of-omar-shaikh-and-three-others
 
This post is nothing to do with this thread but rather an analysis of how the current society works.

When the news came out of acquittal, the most common theme was mass coverage of this story by media including international media. The common phrase (rightly so). On top of that from this very thread we can see so many posters getting active to post their views on the matter (rightly so).

This is not a dig at anyone, its a fact now that negativity sells way more than positivity. A negative article or coverage will garner mass attention and also results in public voicing their views.

My only concern is when the same negative news fizzes out and a correction is made or corrective action is taken which is perceived as a slightly positive news then there is neither the coverage nor the interest of public. What happens then is that general public is only left with only one sided image i.e. the negative image and the corrective news never reaches mass public.

This has got nothing to do with this thread but this is a common theme across everywhere. We can all say that media is too powerful and can control the narrative and an image of a country by publishing one sided stuff. However, its the common people's interest in negativity that has made media thrive and control our lives.

A very brief example in here would be when I was watching cricket yesterday where skysports were discussing the return of cricket to Pakistan. A panel of Hussain and Akram were discussing the return from exile. Hussain made a brief remark that terrorism is still prevalent in Pakistan by giving the reference of attack on the stock exchange. At that point, I could fathom that given the negative media it could have painted that event as a significant terrorist act in Pakistan. I also believe that the positive news around that event which is the reaction of security forces in curtailing the attack at the onset would never be given appropriate coverage for mass media. The point is media controlled the image showing the negative side in bigger lenses and any positive bit is left for small prints.

Unfortunately there is no way out of this as this is how market functions. Given the rise in social media there is another phenomena that is more grave than coverage of positive news and that is fake news.
 
Supreme Court to issue conviction on Daniel Pearl’s murder case

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Supreme Court is expected to decide, reportedly within the next week, the fate of Omar Sheikh, for the adduction and killing of American journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002 - nearly two decades after the murder, which can prove to be an important litmus test of the country’s evolving relationship with the United States.

Ahead of the hearing scheduled for Monday, in a statement from the Pearl family mentions that “this would be an invitation and encouragement to extreme elements all over the globe, to feel free to initiate acts of terrorism, and play games with human lives”, on if Sheikh would not be convicted within the full extent of the law.

Sheikh, who has remained in prison since his conviction was overturned in April, remains adamant that he was not involved in Pearl’s death. Daniel Pearl was reporting extensively on jihadist circles in Pakistan, in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, when he disappeared from the city of Karachi in January 2002 - with a video recording of his beheading being released on the internet a few days later.

While Omar Sheikh alleges that he never met with or communicated with Pearl, prosecutors tell a different story - claiming that the two men met at a hotel in the northern city of Rawalpindi, where he offered Pearl to help with a story, before he lured him to Karachi. The Pearl family has stated that they will be presenting new evidence to the Supreme Court, after a handwritten letter by Sheikh to a lower court, pleading for a hearing, was unearthed - in which Sheikh contradicts his original stance of having no connection to this case, by admitting to a “minor” role in the crime.

https://www.brecorder.com/news/4002...issue-conviction-on-daniel-pearls-murder-case
 
The Supreme Court on Monday barred the Sindh government from releasing the main accused in the Daniel Pearl murder case as it began hearing arguments in a set of appeals challenging the Sindh High Court decision.

The Sindh government as well as the parents of Pearl, who was the Wall Street Journal’s (WSJ) South Asia bureau chief, had filed separate appeals against the April 2 order of the Sindh High Court that had modified the death sentence of the prime accused, Ahmed Omer Saeed Sheikh, to seven-year rigorous imprisonment with a fine of Rs2 million.

Saeed, who had already spent 18 years in prison on death row after being sentenced by an anti-terrorism court, was expected to be released after the high court verdict as his seven-year sentence was to be counted as time already served.

However, the Sindh government issued an order to detain Saeed and four others, whose convictions had been overturned, till Sept 30.

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER AD

During today's hearing, senior counsel Farooq Naek, representing the Sindh government, said that taxi driver Nasir Abbas had identified the accused in front of a magistrate during an identity parade. "Sheikh was arrested on January 13, 2002 and on April 22, 2002 charges were framed against him," he said.

He added that there were a total of 23 witnesses in the case. Amir Afzal, the receptionist at Akbar International Hotel where Sheikh and Pearl met, also identified the accused during an identity parade, he said.

"There were a lot of things going on behind the scenes," Naek said, when the court asked where the conspiracy had taken place. When Sheikh met the journalist, he used the name Bashir, Naek said, adding that he gave a fake name because his intentions were not pure.

"It is possible that the decision to kill was taken a few moments before it actually occurred," remarked Justice Yahya Afridi. Naek replied that the initial plan was to collect ransom, not assassinate the journalist.

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER AD

The court also questioned how charges against Sheikh were proven when the body was never found and an autopsy was never conducted.

"Kidnapping charges were proven. The SHC should have ordered a retrial instead of overturning the death sentence," the Sindh government's lawyer replied.

When asked by the court who identified the accused, Naek reiterated that the taxi driver had identified him during an identity parade.

"The taxi driver's statement is the basis for the government's case," remarked Justice Qazi Amin. "His body was never found so how did the taxi driver identify Pearl," asked the judge.

ARTICLE CONTINUES AFTER AD

"He identified him after looking at a picture," the lawyer replied.

The accused were acquitted on charges of murder and kidnapping for ransom, observed Justice Qazi Amin. "It looks like the high court wrapped up the matter after giving punishment only for the crime of kidnapping," he remarked.

Barring authorities from releasing Saeed and others, and issuing notices to the parties concerned, the court adjourned the hearing until Wednesday.

Earlier in the month, the apex court had referred the appeals against the overturning Sheikh’s death sentence to Pakistan Chief Justice Gulzar Ahmed with a request to fix the hearing within two weeks as his 30-day detention under the anti-terrorism law will end on Sept 30 (Wednesday).

A three-judge bench of the apex court comprising Justice Mushir Alam, Justice Manzoor Ahmed Malik and Justice Qazi Amin Ahmed had requested the CJP that if the appeals were fixed before the bench considering urgency of the matter, it could be heard for the entire day and decided.

The urgency concerns the expiry of the detention period of Sheikh under Section 11 of the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA) 1997, which will expire on Sept 30. The convict had been detained under the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO), previously.

Pearl was doing research on religious extremism when he was kidnapped in Karachi in January 2002. Next month a video showing his decapitation was delivered to the US consulate, followed by the arrest of Sheikh, a Pakistani British, who was later sentenced to death by a trial court.



https://www.dawn.com/news/1582101/s...ing-prime-accused-in-daniel-pearl-murder-case
 
In a recently surfaced court document, Omar Sheikh denies the charge of orchestrating the kidnapping and murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in 2002 from Karachi.

Sheikh, a prime accused and the alleged mastermind of the plot to kidnap and murder Pearl, wrote a letter to the Sindh High Court last year from his prison in Hyderabad. In the letter, seen recently by Geo.tv, the British-born militant claimed that he had a small role in the abduction of the journalist and it was in fact Atta ur Rehman, alias Naim Bokhari, who kidnapped the reporter.

Sheikh also requested the Court to summon him as well as Atta ur Rehman to determine the facts. Rehman is currently facing a death sentence awarded to him by a military court in a separate case.

Read more: The life story of Omar Saeed Sheikh reads like something out of a spy novel

The counsel for the Sindh government, Farooq H. Naik, has also confirmed the authenticity of this letter. “Yes, he had written such a letter,” Naik told Geo.tv.

In the year-old-statement, Sheikh noted that even when Rehman was arrested for Pearl’s killing, he was never charged despite Rs. 1 million head money. “Because it could have exposed the lies against me,” the militant wrote.

He went on to write that Rehman was kept in custody by the paramilitary force, Rangers, for years, and later charged for possession of drugs. “After his release he organised some of the most devastating attacks in Karachi including a bombing at the Ranger's Nazimabad headquarters, where he was kept,” Sheikh continued.

Read more: SHC commutes death penalty of prime accused, acquits three accomplices

Rehman’s involvement in these bombings have been confirmed in the court documents, presented during the trial.

The militant also argues that if Rehman is executed a key piece of evidence in Pearl's case will be lost. “I want to clarify my actual role in Pearl's kidnapping,” Sheikh went on, claiming that neither did he kill Pearl nor kidnap him, which, he adds, was also acknowledged by former President Pervez Musharraf in his book.

While the Court did not entertain the letter, in April it acquitted all four defendants in the 2002 murder of the American journalist. However, Sheikh was found guilty of being involved in abduction for ransom, and his death sentence was commuted to seven years in jail, which he had completed.

But before Sheikh could walk free, the Sindh government detained him first under the Maintenance of Public Order and later under Section 11 of the Anti-Terrorism Act.

Although the detention expired on September 30, the Supreme Court recently restrained the Sindh government from releasing the accused.

While the case is ongoing, the Supreme Court can order a retrial of the high-profile case or uphold the April verdict of the Sindh High Court.
 
ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Wednesday turned down the Sindh government’s request to further extend the detention period of the four accused in Daniel Pearl's murder case.

A three-member bench of the court headed by Justice Mushir Alam and comprising Justice Munib Akhtar and Justice Qazi Muhammad Amin Ahmed heard the case filed by the Sindh government and the parents of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.

Justice Mushir Alam said that the Sindh government had already extended the detention by three months and the court could not extend it further.

During the course of proceedings, Sindh prosecutor general Dr Fayyaz Shah pleaded the court to grant some time to prepare his case, and requested that detention of the four accused be extended.

He said that his office received the court order on October 5, so the documents could not be prepared.

Shah said that main appeals had been filed in the case but time was required to submit further documents.

Read more: A timeline of the Daniel Pearl case

The Sindh government, in exercise of power vested under West Pakistan of Maintenance Public Order Ordinance 1960, extended the detention of the accused, namely Ahmed Sheikh, Fahad Nasim Ahmed, Syed Salman Saqib and Sheikh Muhammad Adil, thrice.

Justice Qazi Muhammad Amin Ahmed asked why the provincial government wanted to detain the accused persons after the Sindh High Court's judgment.

Mahmood Sheikh, counsel for the accused persons said that accused Ahmad Sheikh who was awarded a seven-year punishment, has spent 18 years in jail.

The court directed the Prosecutor General Sindh and other lawyers to appear at the next hearing with full preparation of the case.

It adjourned the hearing of the Sindh government appeal till October 21.
 
ISLAMABAD: The Sindh government has extended for another three months the detention period of Ahmed Omer Saeed Sheikh, who was convicted of kidnapping The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) bureau chief Daniel Pearl, the Supreme Court was informed on Wednesday.

A three-judge SC bench, headed by Justice Mushir Alam, at the previous hearing on Sept 28 had restrained the Sindh government from releasing Sheikh, whose death sentence by trial court in 2002 for Pearl’s murder was set aside by a high court bench earlier this year, for another week as his 30-day detention period under the Anti-Terrorism Act was about to expire on Sept 30. Also, the apex court had admitted for hearing the appeals moved by parents of the American journalist Ruth Pearl and Judea Pearl, Prosecutor General of Sindh Dr Fiaz Shah and the Sindh government, besides the one filed by Sheikh himself.
 
ISLAMABAD: The Sindh government’s counsel Farooq H. Naek on Wednesday tried to convince the Supreme Court that the kidnapping and subsequent cold-blooded murder of US journalist Daniel Pearl was part of events related to international terrorism.

To substantiate the claim, he cited the testimony of principal accused Ahmed Omer Saeed Sheikh who, during the recording of his evidence before the trial court on March 2, 2002, had expressed apprehension that he might be extradited to the United States. Sheikh had also warned that if he was extradited, the US would suffer in the same way as did India.

The counsel said one of the defence witnesses, Rauf Ahmed Sheikh — a close relative of the principal accused — had admitted in his testimony that this was in his knowledge that Omer Sheikh was arrested by the Indian authorities and also tried in India but later released on account of the hijacking of an Indian Airlines aircraft in 1999. However, the witness had stated that he was not sure whether Omer Sheikh was released in consequences of the demand made by the hijackers of the Indian aircraft for his release.

A three-judge Supreme Court bench comprising Justice Mushir Alam, Justice Sardar Tariq Masood and Justice Yahya had taken up a set of appeals filed by the Sindh government, the mother and father of Pearl namely Ruth Pearl and Judea Pearl through senior counsel Faisal Siddiqui as well as Omer Sheikh.



https://www.dawn.com/news/1593635/pearls-murder-was-related-to-international-terrorism-court-told
 
Daniel Pearl case: Sindh court declares detention of accused illegal, orders release

KARACHI: The Sindh High Court declared the detention of the accused exonerated in the Daniel Pearl case illegal and ordered their immediate release.

The court declared the notification regarding the detention of Umer Shaikh and four other accused illegal and ordered their immediate release. The court also directed officials to place the accused on the Exit Control List.

The court said the accused have been in jail for the last 18 years without committing any crime. It added that their imprisonment was illegal and ordered them to appear before the court when they are summoned.

During the hearing, the assistant attorney-general told the court that the detention of the accused was done by the provincial government. He added that the accused were detained on September 28 under the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA).

Apart from Umar Sheikh, the others accused in the case are Fahad Naseem, Syed Suleman Saqib and Sheikh Muhammad Adil.

Earlier this year, the SHC had acquitted three of the accused in the 2002 kidnapping and murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl. It had also converted prime accused Umer Saeed Sheikh's death penalty into a seven-year prison sentence.

A two-judge bench of the high court — headed by Justice Mohammad Karim Khan Agha — had reserved the judgment in March after hearing the arguments of the appellants and the state counsel.

Later, however, Sindh had invoked the Maintenance of Public Order (MPO) law to prevent all of the Daniel Pearl murder suspects from walking free, ordering they be kept in detention for another 90 days.

Following, the SHC verdict, the Sindh government filed an appeal in the Supreme Court over the ruling in which three of the four accused were acquitted and a death sentence of the prime accused was commuted.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/326258-sh...d-in-daniel-pearl-case-illegal-orders-release
 
A provincial court in Pakistan has ordered the release of a British-born Pakistani man charged over the 2002 murder of American journalist Daniel Pearl.

Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, the key suspect in Pearl’s killing, was acquitted of murder charges earlier this year but has been held while Pearl’s family appeals the acquittal.

On Thursday, the Sindh High Court’s release order overturns a decision by the same court with his lawyer, Mehmood Sheikh, calling for his client’s immediate release.

“The detention order is struck down,” said Faisal Siddiqi, the Pearl family’s lawyer, adding that Sheikh will be freed until the appeal is completed but will be returned to prison if the family is successful in overturning the acquittal.

Sheikh was sentenced to death and three others were sentenced to life in prison for their role in the plot. But in April, he was acquitted along with three others, a move that stunned the United States.

The acquittal is now being appealed separately by both the government and Pearl’s family.

The government has opposed Sheikh’s release, saying it would endanger the public.

The Supreme Court will resume its hearing on January 5.

The 38-year-old Wall Street Journal reporter from Encino, California was abducted on January 23, 2002.

Sheikh was convicted of helping lure Pearl to a meeting in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi, in which he was kidnapped.

Pearl had been investigating the link between Pakistani fighters and Richard C Reid, dubbed the “Shoe Bomber” after trying to blow up a flight from Paris to Miami with explosives hidden in his shoes.

A gruesome video of Pearl’s beheading was sent to the US consulate.

In Sheikh’s original trial, emails between Sheikh and Pearl presented in court showed Sheikh gained Pearl’s confidence sharing their experiences as both waited for the birth of their first child.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...elease-of-man-charged-in-daniel-pearl-killing
 
The family of American journalist Daniel Pearl, who was kidnapped and murdered in Pakistan in 2002, has expressed hope that the men involved in the crime will remain in jail, calling a provincial court’s decision to issue their release orders “a travesty of justice”.

Four men, including British-Pakistani Ahmed Omer Saeed Sheikh, were convicted of kidnapping and murdering the Wall Street Journal reporter.

Sheikh was given a death sentence while the three other men were handed life imprisonment.

In April this year, Sheikh’s sentence was modified to seven years in prison and the other three were acquitted.

The same court ordered their release on Thursday.

In a statement sent to Al Jazeera on Friday, Pearl’s family said the “murderers should remain in jail” before the appeal on the acquittal decision that is to be heard by the Supreme Court on January 5.

“We refuse to believe that the Pakistani government and the Pakistani people will let such a travesty of justice tarnish the image and legacy of Pakistan,” said Ruth and Judea, Pearl’s parents, in the statement.

“We believe that our son’s murderers should remain in jail because of the Supreme Court appeals, and we are also heartened to hear the Government of Pakistan is filing an appeal against the latest release order so that our son’s murderers will remain in jail and justice will prevail.

“We have full confidence in the Supreme Court of Pakistan to provide justice for our beloved son and reinforce the paramount importance of the freedom of the press.”

The 38-year-old journalist from Encino, California, was abducted in Karachi in January 2002.

Sheikh was convicted of aiding the kidnapping after helping lure him to a meeting.

Thursday’s court order, seen by Al Jazeera, noted that “none of the petitioners are ‘enemy aliens’ … and as such their detention under this sub Article of the constitution is found to be illegal and without lawful authority”.

The court order added that all four will be placed on the Exit Control List – which would bar them from leaving the country – until the appeals have been decided by the Supreme Court.

The Pearl family’s lawyer, Faisal Siddiqi, told Al Jazeera on Friday that all four should remain in jail as the Thursday court order “said they should be released unless there is an order from the Supreme Court to keep them in jail and there is such an order”.

He said the Supreme Court of Pakistan is going to resume hearing on the appeals against the Sindh High Court’s acquittal on January 5 to determine whether the men were guilty of the charges and should be held in jail.

“Our position is that the acquittal judgement of the Sindh High Court [in April] is wrong as it is based on the assumption that Daniel’s body was never found, which is wrong. His body was found and he is buried in Los Angeles,” Siddiqi told Al Jazeera.

“We are confident that once the hearing resumes on January 5, the Supreme Court will serve justice to Daniel’s family.”

https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/...f-pakistani-justice?__twitter_impression=true
 
The Sindh government will file an application to block the release of Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, the man previously convicted of kidnapping Wall Street Journal journalist Daniel Pearl and facilitating his murder.

Sindh government spokesperson Murtaza Wahab told SAMAA Digital the government will file an application against the Sindh High Court’s order for the release on Monday. “They are not likely to be released today because the court order will reach the prison and legal opinion will be sought on it,” he explained.

The court has ordered the release of Sheikh and struck down any further orders to detain him on Thursday. It was expected that he may be released from the Central Jail, Karachi today (Saturday).

The Sindh High Court issued a short order that the detention orders of Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, Fahad Naseem, Sheikh Adil and Salman Saqib were null and void while hearing the Daniel Pearl murder case.

The men were detained after they were deemed free to go in April and were being kept at the Karachi Central Jail. However, their lawyers challenged them being further detained on the Sindh government orders. This is what the court struck down as being issued “without lawful authority”.

Profile: Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh

Nadeem Ahmed, the lawyer for Sheikh and others, said the jail authorities haven’t sent the release order to the high court for verification yet. The court closes at 3pm and without the release order’s verification, Sheikh cannot be released.

He said the authorities are not picking up his phone calls or those of Sheikh’s family.

Hassan Sehto, the superintendent of Central Jail Karachi, told SAMAA Digital they have sent the release order to the court. “We will see about that after the verification,” he said when asked about the expected release of the prisoner.

Two of Sheikh’s family members arrived at the jail but left without speaking to SAMAA Digital. “The release orders haven’t been verified. We are going back to the high court. We have nothing to comment,” one of them said without revealing his name.

Daniel Pearl’s murder
Pearl, 38, was the South Asia bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal when he was abducted in Karachi in January 2002 while researching links between militants in Pakistan and Richard C Reid, who is also known as the ‘shoe bomber’ for trying to detonate a shoe bomb while on a flight from Paris to Miami in 2001.

Pearl’s wife Mariane Pearl, a US national who was living in Karachi’s Zamzama, wrote a letter to the Artillery Maidan police on February 2, 2002, and said that her husband disappeared on January 23, 2002. She said she received an email from the abductors saying that he has been abducted “in retaliation for the imprisonment of Pakistani men by the US government in Cuba and other complaints”.

A graphic video showing Pearl’s decapitation was delivered to the US consulate in Karachi nearly a month after he was kidnapped.

After this, a case was filed against the suspects and 23 witnesses were produced in the case by the prosecution. Sheikh was arrested by Pakistani security agencies in February 2002 and an anti-terrorism court convicted him and others on July 15, 2002.

An investigation, led by Pearl’s friend and former Wall Street Journal colleague Asra Nomani and a Georgetown University professor, claimed the reporter was murdered by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the September 11, 2001 attacks, not Sheikh. Mohammed — better known as KSM — was arrested in Pakistan in 2003 and is being held at Guantanamo Bay.

https://www.samaa.tv/news/2020/12/omar-ahmed-sheikh-daniel-pearl-release/
 
Daniel Pearl killing: Pakistan court frees man accused in beheading of U.S. journalist

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan’s Supreme Court on Thursday ordered the release of a Pakistani man convicted and later acquitted in the gruesome beheading of American journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002.

The court also dismissed an appeal of Ahmad Saeed Omar Sheikh's acquittal by Pearl’s family and the Pakistani government.

Sheikh has been on death row since his conviction in the death of Pearl in 2002. His attorney said Sheikh “should not have spent one day in jail.”

Attorney Mehmood A. Sheikh, no relation, said the court also ordered the release of three other Pakistanis who had been sentenced to life in prison for their part in Pearl’s kidnapping and death.


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/...ub5EQ35e2F8VvbGpkDfs6BeB6xxTsyPKSOHn1IyRv5sVE


Thoughts?
 
The url is there if people want to read the full article. This is a disgrace to pakistan.
 
Not sure if this is a good move even diplomatically. Not the best way to start a relationship with a new regime in the US. Rest what should have happened here to the culprit or what one feels about this decision is self explanatory
 
It is a decision by the court you have to respect it or produce convincing proofs

You mean evidences/proofs like DNA samples etc from the crime scene CSI style after a thorough police investigation and procedures at the Taliban site?

Or May be a gory beheading video with the culprit’s face showing up ?

I wonder which one the court was waiting on
 
You mean evidences/proofs like DNA samples etc from the crime scene CSI style after a thorough police investigation and procedures at the Taliban site?

Or May be a gory beheading video with the culprit’s face showing up ?

I wonder which one the court was waiting on
Khalid sheikh confessed he killed Daniel in cia custody and fbi confirmed this how a man can be killed twice.
 
Well, I have no feelings. Americans killed innocent 4-year-old Pakistani kids in their drone attacks and not a single protest/apology came from American politicians and the American nation in general. And in the words of drone operators, their big bosses have no remorse in identifying such targets that involve innocent kids. Human life is human life everywhere.
 
Well, I have no feelings. Americans killed innocent 4-year-old Pakistani kids in their drone attacks and not a single protest/apology came from American politicians and the American nation in general. And in the words of drone operators, their big bosses have no remorse in identifying such targets that involve innocent kids. Human life is human life everywhere.

Nobody knows the names of any of these kids but Pearl is famous world over.

Imo Pearl was a spy in Pakistan. He was killed by someone else and this chap was given the blame, which is why the court have freed him.

Time to move on.
 
Well, I have no feelings. Americans killed innocent 4-year-old Pakistani kids in their drone attacks and not a single protest/apology came from American politicians and the American nation in general. And in the words of drone operators, their big bosses have no remorse in identifying such targets that involve innocent kids. Human life is human life everywhere.

They had one word “collateral damage”. If these kids are collateral damage than the 9/11 was indeed also collateral damage. They just wanted to destroy American economy. Absolutely shameless and hateful stuff from both al qaida and usa
 
You mean evidences/proofs like DNA samples etc from the crime scene CSI style after a thorough police investigation and procedures at the Taliban site?

Or May be a gory beheading video with the culprit’s face showing up ?

I wonder which one the court was waiting on

Can you provide a link where he was seen murdering the victim?

This is the typical prosecution cockup we see over and over again in Pakistan. This guy is most probably involved in Pearl's abduction but not his murder. From the above article Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had admitted to killing Pearl and is locked up in Gitmo.

An investigation, led by Pearl’s friend and former Wall Street Journal colleague Asra Nomani and a Georgetown University professor, claimed the reporter was murdered by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the September 11, 2001 attacks, not Sheikh. Mohammed — better known as KSM — was arrested in Pakistan in 2003 and is being held at Guantanamo Bay.


While you are at it, can you tell me who was convicted of tearing down Babri Masjid? There were videos of all and sundry to see in that case as well??
 
Still yet to watch the movie with Jolie and irrfan

A very powerful and emotional movie. Although they messed up some of the more Pakistani aspects of it.

Having said that, the guy whose computers were used lived in Noman Grand City, Gulistan e Jauhar in the J Block right next to me in the I block where I was living at the time. I was even in the community council and the intelligence services etc came to us before raiding the place. You can see the side angle of my apartment at around the 59.32 minute mark.
 
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Sounds like this judgement was made on the basis of some pretty shoddy evidence.

Following an investigation, the four men were arrested, charged and then convicted in 2002.
There seemed strong evidence that Sheikh had masterminded the kidnapping, having been identified at the hotel in Rawalpindi by two separate eyewitnesses. But the prosecution case was deeply flawed, says the BBC's Secunder Kermani in Islamabad.
He says that it is widely acknowledged that Mr Sheikh first handed himself over to Pakistan's powerful intelligence services. However, police and prosecutors attempted to gloss over that, and instead, in spite of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, claimed he had been arrested a week later, wandering around Karachi airport.
What's more, our correspondent says, evidence began to emerge that Mr Sheikh had not physically carried out the murder himself. Instead, it's now thought a senior al-Qaeda operative currently in Guantanamo Bay, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (no relation), was responsible.
The Pakistani authorities, however, deliberately discounted testimony suggesting that was the case.
Speaking on the condition of anonymity, two former leading figures in the investigation told the BBC of their frustration at how it had been handled. One said the decision to try and brush over discrepancies in the timeline, and ignore evidence suggesting Sheikh was not present at the time of the murder, undermined the rest of the case, even though they believed it was clear Sheikh had orchestrated the abduction.
In April 2020, a high court in Sindh acquitted Omar Saeed Sheikh and the other three men of murder.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-55850448
 
Doesn't matter if he was the one who carried out the beheading. If he was involved in the planning of the murder then he deserves the death penalty as do everyone else involved.

I don't know why people are defending this animal. This type of incidents is what caused Pakistan to be a no-go zone for foreigners for almost 20 years. Now Pakistan is finally getting back to normal and establishing itself in the global tourism map and so much effort has gone into convincing the international community that Pakistan is a safe place to visit. Judgements such as this severely undermine that effort and this dog is not worth it. There is enough evidence against him being involved in other acts of terrorism. Let him rot in hell.
 
The provincial government in Pakistan’s Sindh has petitioned the Supreme Court to review its decision to free two men convicted of kidnapping and beheading US journalist Daniel Pearl.

The move on Friday came a day after the court acquitted British-born Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh and Faisal Siddiqi, who were convicted for the Wall Street Journal reporter’s murder in 2002.

The decision outraged the United States and extended a legal tug of war between the Sindh government – which kept the group behind bars using emergency powers – and the courts.

Fiaz Shah, prosecutor general for Sindh government, told AFP news agency it has lodged a review of the verdict at the Supreme Court in the capital, Islamabad.

“The petition was filed to seek a review and request the court to recall the order of acquittal,” Shah said.

Pearl was the South Asia bureau chief for the Wall Street Journal when he was abducted in Karachi in January 2002 while researching a story about armed fighters.

Nearly a month later and after a string of ransom demands were made, a graphic video showing his decapitation was given to officials.

Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh
British-born Sheikh, who once studied at the London School of Economics and had been involved in the kidnapping of foreigners previously, was arrested days after Pearl’s abduction.

He was later sentenced to death by hanging after telling a Karachi court that Pearl had already been killed days before the gruesome video of the journalist’s beheading had been released.

The top court’s ruling on Thursday followed an outcry last year when a lower court acquitted 47-year-old Sheikh of murder and reduced his conviction to a lesser charge of kidnapping – overturning his death sentence and ordering him to be freed after almost 20 years in prison.

That sparked a series of petitions, including from Pearl’s family, but the Supreme Court rejected them in a split decision, upholding the acquittal.

The Sindh government has not released Sheikh and three accomplices who were also acquitted, provincial Information Minister Nasir Shah said.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021...ies-appeal-acquittals-in-pearl-beheading-case
 
Interesting piece on Sheikh from the Sunday Times back in 2002. His life is like something out of a spy novel.

April 21, 2002

The British jackal
The Sunday Times, London
April 21, 2002

From a London public school to the shadow of the noose — Nick Fielding unravels a story of terrorism, betrayal and political intrigue that is approaching its denouement in a foreign courtroom

Just inside London's North Circular Road at Snaresbrook, where the outer reaches of the East End give way at last to the genteel villages of Epping Forest, is a fee-paying school of 1,100 pupils that counts among its former students the England cricket captain Nasser Hussain and the Manchester United midfielder Quinton Fortune.

The Forest school, founded in 1834, is proud of its sporting traditions. It also does well in exam league tables and exudes a quiet respectability. Many of its pupils come from the families of successful Asian entrepreneurs in the area.

One boy who was expected to do particularly well when he left to study at the London School of Economics 10 years ago was Omar Saeed Sheikh. He was not too good at orthodox sports — he preferred arm wrestling in pubs — but he was bright enough to have earned A-grade passes at A-level in maths and economics.

All who have met him speak of his charm, his humour, his good looks. His former tutor in economics, George Paynter, remembers: "He was pleasant and communicative, had a jolly good brain and was a willing and capable student.”

A decade later, 28-year-old Sheikh is on trial for his life with three other men in a cage in a Karachi prison, accused of involvement in the kidnapping and particularly cruel murder of the American journalist Daniel Pearl.

The high, spacious courtroom is divided in two: one part for the four prisoners in their metal cage, the other for court officials. Defending lawyers have their thumbprints checked by a computer. No journalists or members of the public are allowed in. Outside, up to 200 armed police stand guard.

Sheikh comes to court each day wearing a white shalwar kameez, his glasses and trimmed beard giving him a studious look. He is trying both to charm and to intimidate those around him. In the last hearing two weeks ago he objected to the court proceedings, saying they were based on English law and that he wanted to be tried under Islamic sharia law. "I don't accept this English court. I should be tried under shariat law,” he shouted at the judge, Arshad Noor Khan.

At the same time he has been exhibiting the charm which saw him effortlessly entrap at least half a dozen westerners into kidnap and, in Pearl's case, murder. "He is a nice man. He makes no complaints. He is very well behaved,” said Amanullah Niazi, a senior official at Karachi Central Prison.

Sheikh has pleaded not guilty to the Pearl charges; but by his own account, shouted out to reporters during one of his court appearances, he was behind other crimes, including blowing up the Kashmir parliament in October last year, the attack on the Indian parliament last December — which almost resulted in war between India and Pakistan — the kidnapping of Indian businessmen for ransom and the attack on the American Cultural Centre in Calcutta in January.

Both the Americans and the British would like to interrogate Sheikh, who is wanted in the United States for his kidnapping in 1994 of an American citizen, as well as for conspiracy to commit hostage taking in relation to Pearl.

The charges against him in Karachi carry the death penalty. Whatever the verdict announced in the next day or two, however, so many powerful men in Pakistan are afraid of the knowledge that Sheikh holds that he is unlikely to leave the country alive.

Nor is the real story likely to be told in court. For Sheikh is no ordinary terrorist but a man who has connections that reach high into Pakistan's military and intelligence elite and into the innermost circles of Osama Bin Laden and the Al-Qaeda organisation.

His use of charm, intelligence and brutality to achieve his ideological ends draws an obvious comparison with Carlos the Jackal — the glamorous Venezuelan-born terrorist Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, who played cat-and-mouse with western governments in the 1970s when Sheikh was a small boy at an east London primary school.

For months I have been piecing together the hidden story of this charismatic yet repugnant figure, on whose account so many people have suffered. As the trial approaches its conclusion and Sheikh awaits his fate, I can reveal what took him there and who has exploited his commitment to terror.

Like most people in Britain I had never heard of him until last September, just after the attack on the World Trade Center, when I received a call from a journalist in India. Did I know, the caller asked, that the British were asking India for legal assistance to try to find a man called Omar Sheikh for questioning? My contact said Sheikh was an Islamic terrorist and kidnapper who had been freed from an Indian jail in 1999 in exchange for 154 passengers on a hijacked Indian Airlines plane.

Intriguingly, the British inquiry about him had been made in August, before the attacks on America. I was told by police sources that, although almost unknown to the western public, this Londoner was considered to be a potential leader of the Islamic fundamentalist movement.

Gradually, after that first tip-off, the story of the making of this top terrorist emerged, much of it in his own words. Perhaps as chilling is the underlying story I eventually uncovered: his involvement with Pakistani intelligence, the step too far that may prove to be his death warrant.

IN 1968, a young Pakistani businessman called Saeed Ahmed Sheikh and his wife Qaissia left the village of Dhoka Mandi near Lahore and travelled to Britain, where they settled in Wanstead, one of east London's more leafy suburbs. Five years later, on December 23, 1973, their son Omar was born at nearby Whipps Cross hospital. Later they had another son, Awais, and a daughter, Hajira.

After attending Nightingale primary school in Wanstead, Omar transferred to the £8,000-a-year Forest school, a 10-minute bus ride away, where he studied until he was 13. In 1987, his father sold up his business in London and decided to move the family back to Pakistan. Some say it was because he thought his children would have a more moral upbringing.

The family semi in Wanstead was rented out and Omar Sheikh went to live with his grandparents on Ravi Road in Lahore. He was sent to Aitchison College, a prestigious school favoured by Pakistan's elite, but he left after only two years. "He was a violent person, into boxing,” says Syed Ali Dayan Hasan, who studied with him. Hasan says Sheikh was expelled for beating up fellow pupils, but Sheikh has claimed it was because he failed his higher secondary exam.

Sheikh's father had invested about £250,000 in a business, Crystal Chemical Factory Ltd, with three relatives. But the company failed and Sheikh's father decided to return to Britain in December 1989. Here he started Perfect Fashion, an import-export business that still exists today in a grimy Commercial Road shopfront in the East End garment district.

By December 1990 Sheikh had been called back from Pakistan and was once again at Forest school, studying for his A-levels and obtaining admission to the LSE, where he read applied mathematics, statistical theory, economics and social psychology.

Having matured into a powerfully built young man, he relaxed through arm wrestling, a sport that thrives in a network of pubs. He even attended the "world championships” in Geneva in 1992 as part of the 17-strong British team.

"He was a very nice guy, well mannered and educated,” recalls David Shead, head referee of the European Arm Wrestling Federation. "He liked a joke and always had a bit of nerve. Sheikh never won any titles, but competed for a year or two.”

Shead remembers Sheikh turning up for an arm wrestling match with a fierce former convict known simply as Mr X. "Mr X always wore dark glasses and on the day Omar showed up for the match, he too was wearing the same kind of glasses. He was trying to psych him out, to get an edge and to have a laugh at the other guy's expense,” says Shead.

What was it that drove this congenial figure towards terrorism? The first clue came in October last year when I found that Sheikh's diary had been discovered among forgotten legal papers in a courthouse near Delhi.

The 35-page diary, written in neat longhand after he was shot in an attempted kidnapping in India in 1994, explains in a matter-of-fact manner how he had turned his back on his comfortable middle-class existence in Britain at the age of 20 to join a Pakistan-based organisation that supported Bin Laden and had dedicated himself to a jihad against the "corrupt” West.

The diary shows a complete lack of conscience. In it, Sheikh reveals how he kidnapped gullible western backpackers in India by pretending to take them to a feudal village that he had inherited from an uncle: "It seems amazing the story was greeted with such credible enthusiasm, but the newly arrived traveller in India yearns to hear extraordinary stories.”

My next breakthrough came in a confession written by Sheikh or possibly dictated to him by Indian interrogators after his 1994 arrest. Drier than his diary, it nonetheless filled in many of the gaps.

"During my initial period in the LSE I became a member of the Islamic Society,” Sheikh said. "In November 1992, ‘Bosnia Week' was observed and various documentary films on Bosnia were shown. One such film, The Destruction of a Nation, shook my heart. The reason being Bosnian Muslims were shown being butchered by the Serbs.”

It was the start of Sheikh's political involvement. He helped to organise a student conference on Bosnia and began fundraising.

At the end of February 1993, despite his studies, Sheikh accompanied his father on a business trip to Pakistan, taking with him propaganda videos on the war in Bosnia, and made contact with Islamic militants. On his return he decided to join a "convoy of mercy” to Bosnia in the Easter holidays.

This expedition, said Sheikh, was run by a Pakistani businessman living in Finchley, north London. The six-vehicle convoy took relief material to Bosnia, although Sheikh said it was also organising clandestine support for the Muslim fighters. When he got to Split, near the border between Croatia and Bosnia, he was unable to go on "due to indisposition and fatigue”. While recuperating he met Abdur Rauf, a Pakistani veteran of the fighting in Afghanistan who had arrived to join the Muslim militia.

Rauf belonged to the Harakut-ul- Mujaheddin (HUM), an Islamic guerrilla group. Sensing a potential recruit, Rauf advised Sheikh not to waste his time as an aid worker in Bosnia but to train as a fighter in Pakistan. According to the interrogation document, Rauf suggested that Maulvi Ismail, imam of the Clifton mosque in north London, whom he described as a sympathiser of HUM, could help Sheikh to get his father's permission to take up jihad.

Five months later, Sheikh arrived in Lahore "with zeal and intention to undergo arms training and joining the mujaheddin”. He was directed to Miranshah on the Afghan border.

"I saw approximately 20 youths waiting to undergo arms training in Afghanistan. Miranshah is a place where arms/ammunition are easily available and smuggling of arms is also open,” Sheikh told his Indian interrogators.

From here he crossed into Afghanistan to the Khalid bin Waleed training camp where he joined the "Istakbalia” 40-day training course. "The training schedule included morning namaz (prayers) in the mosque followed by physical exercise till 0800 hours. After breakfast we were imparted classes in handling of small and medium firearms, Kalashnikov and Seminov, till lunch, followed by a rest of two hours and then namaz . . . Other exercises included night security duties and firing practice. For the latter we used to get six cartridges each.”

After two weeks, ill-health forced Sheikh back to the Lahore home of his uncle, Tariq Shaikh, who "tried to persuade me to quit arms training and go back to the UK. But I remained adamant and resumed training after a hiatus of 10 days”.

He soon joined a special course from September to December 1993. The instructors, Sheikh says in the interrogation document, were from the Pakistan army's Special Services Group and taught surveillance techniques, disguise, interrogation, secret writing and codes, first aid, making attacks and night ambushes. "This special training was sort of a city warfare training. Apart from the above-mentioned, weapons training in assault rifle, rocket launcher etc was also imparted by the same instructors.”

At the end of the course, the training camp was visited by senior HUM leaders. One of them, Maulana (Mullah) Masood Azhar — who would later visit Sheikh's father during a trip to Britain — asked Sheikh to come to India with him for an important mission. But his dual nationality was a problem. It would be difficult to get an Indian visa.

So he returned to Britain in January 1994, starting martial arts classes in Crawley, West Sussex, for a group of Muslims and trying to interest his old friends and classmates in joining the jihad in Afghanistan.

He renewed his British passport and dropped his dual nationality. Finally in March 1994 he got an Indian visa and the following month left for Afghanistan where he attended a refresher course and became an instructor on another course for new recruits.

Two months later, in June 1994, he once again received a visit from senior leaders of HUM — now renamed Harrikat-ul-Ansar (HUA) — who asked him to help a group of activists captured in India and Maulana Masood Azhar, who had by then been arrested in Kashmir.

He was told that several British backpackers had been captured in Kashmir with a view to being exchanged for the activists, "but due to weak planning they had to be released unconditionally”. This was not true. Five westerners — including two Britons — kidnapped in Kashmir had been brutally murdered. Their bodies have never been recovered.

One far-fetched idea suggested to Sheikh was that he should join a cruise ship in America and make friends with passengers whom he could later kidnap: "I smiled at this suggestion because it appeared to be a very funny idea to me.”

Instead they decided to organise a kidnapping in India, of either foreigners or leading members of the BJP, the ruling Hindu nationalist party. Its supporters had been behind the destruction of the 16th-century Babri Masjid mosque, which had inflamed Muslim opinion across the world.

Sheikh booked himself a flight in July. After arriving in Delhi, he checked in to the Holiday Inn with some of the £600 and 20,000 Indian rupees he had been allocated for his mission.

There, with several accomplices, he kidnapped three Britons and an American, holding them in safe houses well away from Delhi. It was an amateurish operation with Sheikh himself at one point walking into the BBC offices in New Delhi to deliver a ransom note.

Letters containing photographs of the captives were sent to the Indian prime minister and to local news agencies. But the operation went wrong at the end of October when a police patrol stumbled across the kidnappers close to one of the safe houses. A scuffle broke out followed by a gunfight in which a senior Indian policeman was killed and Sheikh was shot in the shoulder. All the hostages were freed unharmed and Sheikh was sent to prison, where interrogation took place and he wrote his diary.

The diary is a disturbing document. It reveals a pleasant, educated academic achiever who could put all that aside and immerse himself in the dirty business of playing with other people's lives. Despite his injuries and incarceration, it is almost jaunty in tone.

Writing about his arrival in India in the autumn of 1994, prior to the first batch of kidnaps, he states: "Over the next month, every place I visited I analysed from various points of view as a ‘future conqueror' as I fondly imagined myself to be, as a social scientist, a traveller, noting down the intricacies of a new country. I went to mosques and madrassahs and talked about ideas pertaining to jihad.”

Nowhere in his diary is there even a hint of remorse. The only sign of that came from an interview carried out by an Indian television journalist, Zubair Ahmed, shortly after Sheikh was first arrested. He was seen in a private hospital under heavy armed guard. "The authorities clearly had no idea who he was,” recalls Ahmed.

"With police permission we filmed an interview at his hospital bed. Sheikh looked extremely worried and he told me he would give anything to return to life in Britain. Over and over, he repeated he had made a mistake . . . I asked him if he was released, would he go back and tell people in Britain that we Indian Muslims were free to build mosques, say our prayers and work in government offices? He said he would. He appeared repentant, but clearly not enough.”

After five years held without trial at Tihar prison near Delhi, Sheikh was released in December 1999 with Maulana Masood Azhar in exchange for 154 passengers on board an Indian Airlines plane hijacked by fellow members of HUA. He was flown to Kandahar airport in Afghanistan. Officially he then disappeared; but it is now clear that he began living within the Sheikh family circle in Lahore.

He appears to have kept little back from his family about his activities. He married and had a child; it is inconceivable that the Pakistani authorities did not know where he was.


BY the beginning of this year, the story of Sheikh's background was reasonably clear in my mind. He was a seasoned terrorist with both operational and prison experience behind him. But who was running him and what would he do next? The answers came more quickly than I anticipated. At the end of January, Daniel Pearl of The Wall Street Journal was kidnapped in Karachi and murdered after his captors had taunted his wife, his newspaper and the police with false leads and photographs of the journalist being held at gunpoint.

The incident looked similar to the kidnappings in India. I felt sure Sheikh was involved. Within days I was in Pakistan, staying in the same guesthouse used by Pearl and, like every other journalist in the region, trying to report this terrible story while looking over my shoulder to avoid a similar fate.

Confirmation came within a few days when three people arrested over the case, including a cousin of Sheikh, confessed he had provided them with photographs of Pearl to e-mail to news organisations. It would later emerge that Sheikh had already had a meeting with Pearl in Rawalpindi and that the meeting in Karachi had been planned down to the smallest detail.

Sheikh had left his home in Lahore with his wife and newborn baby four days before the Pearl kidnapping and was now on the run. It would be only a matter of time before he was caught.

Now the next question: who was Sheikh working for? There was one bizarre clue in the demands made by Pearl's kidnappers, who wanted America to honour an agreement to sell F-16 fighter aircraft to Pakistan. This hardly squared with the outlook of a militant Muslim organisation fighting a jihad in Afghanistan and Kashmir.

It did, however — no matter how counterproductively — express the interests of Pakistan's military government, which wanted the fighters so they could be fitted out to carry nuclear warheads. What was going on?

The next clue came with the revelation that Sheikh was in custody. On a visit to America on February 12, Pakistan's leader, General Pervez Musharraf, announced that he had been captured by police in Lahore. But Sheikh shouted out in court that he had turned himself in to the home secretary of the Punjab, retired Brigadier Ejaz Shah, on February 5, a full week earlier.

Shah, who had served in the Pakistan military's powerful and pervasive Inter-Services Intelligence service (ISI), used to direct the activities of two Islamic terrorist groups fighting in Kashmir. He reportedly passed on the news of Sheikh's surrender to General Mohammad Aziz Khan, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff committee and former head of the ISI section dealing with India and Afghanistan. Khan knew Sheikh personally.

It would appear that the ISI had its own reasons for holding Sheikh for a week before announcing to the world that he was in custody. One thing it would have wanted to do was to make sure that its protégé did not give more away than absolutely necessary about his relationship with Pakistan's intelligence services.

This "missing week” shed new light on unsubstantiated Indian reports last October that Lieutenant General Mahmud Ahmed, director-general of the ISI, had been forced into retirement after FBI investigators uncovered credible links between him and Sheikh in the wake of September 11.

According to these reports, the FBI team established that in early September, Ahmed had instructed Sheikh to transfer $100,000 to Mohammed Atta, leader of the hijackers who crashed into the World Trade Center.

There is a further angle that implicates the ISI. It had strong reasons for tailing Pearl: he was normally based in India, which to the ISI was prima facie evidence that he was reporting back to Indian intelligence. When the ISI discovered Pearl was trying to find out who was financing the HUA, it was the final straw, according to a source in Karachi. "He was beginning to get too close to understanding the links between the ISI and the jihadis,” alleged the source.

"Sheikh was their (the ISI's) man and he was brought in to deal with Pearl. The ISI knew everything.” The Karachi police, who deeply distrust the ISI, leaked details of their interrogation of Sheikh in which he talked about his ISI connections. As a result, ISI operatives broke into the newsroom of The News, Pakistan's largest English language newspaper, in February in an apparent attempt to prevent publication of a leak in which Sheikh was reported to have said that the ISI helped him to finance, plan and execute last December's attack on the Indian parliament.

The News is edited by Shaheen Sehbai, the first local journalist Pearl contacted when he arrived in Pakistan. Failing to prevent publication of Sheikh's confession, the ISI demanded an apology from Sehbai, who has fled to America fearing for his life.

M J Gohel of the Asia-Pacific Foundation, a security and terrorism policy assessment group that has been researching Pearl's murder, said: "Sheikh is a vital key that can open all the doors to the Al-Qaeda network, to the links between the Pakistani military intelligence establishment and the terror groups, and can destroy General Musharraf's credibility with Washington.

He is a vital piece in the jigsaw and for that reason it is highly unlikely the US will ever be allowed to interrogate him.” The full story of the kidnapping of Pearl will probably never come to light. What is clear is that Sheikh has for long been very close to the ISI and that it regarded him as an asset. The whole affair has been a setback and embarrassment to Musharraf and has destabilised the country.

Small wonder that Musharraf is said to have told Wendy Chamberlain, the American ambassador, that he would rather "hang Sheikh myself than have him extradited”.

https://www.mea.gov.in/articles-in-foreign-media.htm?dtl/18174/The+British+jackal

It’s also been reported that he had ties to MI6.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/archive/print/645798-omar-sheikh-is-mi6-agent-musharraf

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2005/sep/10/terrorism.politics
 
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