[INDEX | NATIONAL | WORLD | PERSPECTIVE | COLUMNS | MONEY | ENTERTAINMENT | HEALTH | TECH | LETTERS | SUBSCRIBE]

FinalCall.com News

World News
First Pakistani to sue CIA over drones freed after kidnapping, torture
By RT.com
Updated Mar 3, 2014 - 11:39:12 AM

A Pakistani man known for his vocal opposition to the U.S. drone program whose kidnapping outraged activists throughout the world has been returned home after being tortured and interrogated, his lawyer announced Friday.

Kareem Khan was last seen in the early morning hours of Feb. 5 outside his home approximately nine miles from Islamabad. He is said to have been abducted by 15–20 men, some of whom were wearing police uniforms, and taken away.

The kidnapping, which happened as his wife and children were also at home, came just days before Mr. Khan was scheduled to testify to lawmakers in Europe about a drone strike that killed his father, brother, and a Taliban leader Mr. Khan is suspected of sheltering.

Mr. Khan was also the first man to sue both the Pakistan government and the Central Intelligence Agency over the deaths of his loved ones. Islamabad has publicly condemned the drone strikes yet has failed to convince much of the international community it is not complicit.

Shahzad Akbar, Mr. Khan’s lawyer, said his client has safely returned home after he was tied up and beaten on the soles of his feet. Atty. Akbar said Mr. Khan was first tortured by men wearing police uniforms and others wearing civilian clothing.

“He was questioned about so many people he had no idea about. He was also questioned about drone victims by name,” Atty. Akbar said Fed. 14. “He was told not to go near media when he was released. If you speak with media, they said, we will come back for you.”

When Mr. Khan was first kidnapped the police denied any involvement, with a spokesman telling reporters that no raid had been scheduled. However Mr. Khan was freed less than two days after a Pakistani court ordered the authorities to release him by Feb. 20 or provide a reason for his imprisonment.

Reprieve, the human rights organization that first organized Mr. Khan’s trip to various European parliaments, issued a statement Feb. 14 after his release detailing the harsh treatment.

“After being abducted in the early morning hours of February 5 by 15-20 men, 8 of whom were in police uniform, Mr. Khan was taken to a cell in an undisclosed location,” the agency noted. “Later in the day of February 5, he was blindfolded and driven for approximately 2-3 hours to another undisclosed location where he remained until his release.

“While detained, Mr. Khan was interrogated, beaten and tortured. He was placed in chains and repeatedly questioned about his investigations into drone strikes, his knowledge of drone strike victims and his work advocating on their behalf.”

Mr. Akbar, a prominent activist in his own right, pulled no punches when he decried the incident as “nothing new in Pakistan,” where “the executive enjoys impunity.”

“The lesson learned through this experience is that we must always raise our voices,” he said. “We need to take this stand for each other and every person who disappears, it is the only way to force those in power to listen. That is why I am so thankful to all the local international activists who spoke out for Kareem.” (RT.com)

FCN is a distributor (and not a publisher) of content supplied by third parties. Original content supplied by FCN and FinalCall.com News is Copyright 2012 FCN Publishing, FinalCall.com. Content supplied by third parties are the property of their respective owners.