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Pakistan: U.S. Citizens Tortured, Held Illegally
By Human Rights Watch
05/24/05 - - U.S. FBI agents operating in Pakistan
repeatedly interrogated and threatened two U.S. citizens of
Pakistani origin who were unlawfully detained and subjected to
torture by the Pakistani security services. (New York, May 24,
2005) -- U.S. FBI agents operating in Pakistan repeatedly
interrogated and threatened two U.S. citizens of Pakistani origin
who were unlawfully detained and subjected to torture by the
Pakistani security services, Human Rights Watch said today. The
brothers Zain
Afzal and Kashan Afzal were abducted from their home in
Karachi at about 2 a.m. on August 13, 2004. They were released on
April 22, 2005 without having been charged.
During eight months of illegal detention, Zain Afzaland Kashan
Afzal were routinely tortured by Pakistani authorities to extract
confessions of involvement in terrorist activities. During this
period, FBI agents questioned the brothers on at least six
occasions. The FBI agents did not intervene to end the torture,
insist that the Pakistani government comply with a court order to
produce the men in court, or provide consular facilities normally
offered to detained U.S. citizens. Instead, they threatened the
men with being sent to the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo
Bay if they did not confess to involvement in terrorism.
Human Rights Watch's information is based on extensive and
separate interviews with the two brothers since their release and
other sources.
"It is outrageous that Pakistan abducts people from their
homes in the middle of the night and tortures them in secret
prisons to extract confessions, all the while ignoring court
orders to produce their victims in court," said Brad Adams,
Asia director of Human Rights Watch. "The United States
should be condemning this, but instead it either directed this
activity or turned a blind eye in the hopes of gaining information
in the war on terror."
Human Rights Watch pointed out that Pakistan has a long and
well-documented history of "disappearances," illegal and
arbitrary arrests, and torture of individuals in government
custody. According to the 2004 State Department human rights
country report on Pakistan:
Police and security forces held prisoners incommunicado and
refused to provide information on their whereabouts, particularly
in terrorism and national security cases … Security force
personnel continued to torture persons in custody throughout the
country. Human rights organizations reported that methods used
included beating; burning with cigarettes; whipping the soles of
the feet; prolonged isolation; electric shock; denial of food or
sleep; hanging upside down; and forced spreading of the legs with
bar fetters. Officials from the Human Rights Commission of
Pakistan (HRCP) estimated 5,000 cases of police torture annually.
... Prison conditions were extremely poor, except those for
wealthy or influential prisoners. ... Shackling of prisoners was
routine. The shackles used were tight, heavy, and painful, and
reportedly led to gangrene and amputation in several cases.
"Pakistan's dreadful record on illegal detentions and
torture, well-known to the United States, should have acted as a
stop sign for the FBI," said Adams. "Instead, the FBI
aided and abetted the illegal actions of the Pakistani security
services by participating in the interrogations."
While the brothers were being detained, their mother and Zain
Afzal's wife attempted to lodge an abduction case with the local
police. The police refused to register the case, informing them
that "this was a matter involving the intelligence
agencies." The police finally registered the case on November
15, 2004, on the orders of the Sindh High Court. During habeas
corpus hearings, filed by their mother, Pakistani authorities
denied holding the two men. Zain Afzal's wife made frequent public
pleas for the brothers' release and approached the U.S. embassy,
but received no help.
Nida Afzal, the Chicago-based sister of the two men, informed
Human Rights Watch that she was telephoned by an FBI agent in late
October, 2004. She alleged that the agent "categorically
stated" that "they [Zain Afzal and Kashan Afzal] are in
our custody." Later that day, two FBI agents came to see Nida
Afzal at her home. The agents questioned her about her brothers'
links to Afghanistan. One of the agents identified herself as
Betsy A. Pryer and left a card. According to Nida Afzal,
"They identified themselves and verified our identity. Though
I pointed out that they had stated on the phone that my brothers
were in their custody and asked repeatedly where my brothers were,
the agents then refused to accept that they were in the FBI's
custody."
The 2004 State Department human rights report makes clear that
embassies in Pakistan can meet with their nationals in custody:
"Foreign diplomats may meet with prisoners when they appear
in court and may meet with citizens of their countries in prison
visits." Yet no such visits took place until Human Rights
Watch intervened seven months after the brothers were abducted.
When queried about the status of the brothers and the role of
the FBI, the U.S. Consul in Karachi in March replied: "We are
aware of the reports indicating two American citizens are missing,
or 'disappeared' in Pakistan, and we are looking into them. Due to
Privacy Act considerations, we are unable to provide additional
information on these two individuals. The safety and security of
Americans overseas is of paramount importance to us, and we
continue to work both here and abroad to provide all possible
assistance to our citizens. I refer you to the FBI for any
information on their involvement."
"While U.S. officials say the safety and security of
Americans overseas is paramount, the U.S. government didn't lift a
finger to help the Afzal brothers until their cases were reported
in the international press," said Adams. "The U.S. knew
exactly where the brothers were all along, while their family was
scared stiff, not knowing whether they were dead or alive. This is
profoundly wrong and should send a chill up the spine of every
U.S. citizen living overseas."
The August 13 arrest was the second time Zain Afzal was
abducted by Pakistani intelligence agents. On May 5, 2004, he was
taken away from the same house in Karachi and released the
following day. On that occasion Zain Afzal was tortured, returning
home with a burst eardrum and severe lacerations on his back. He
was unable to walk after being tortured in custody, and needed an
operation on his ear. Medical reports corroborate these claims.
Zain Afzal said he was questioned about a trip to Afghanistan,
about his feelings toward the U.S.-led "war against
terrorism," and about suspected links to Islamist
organizations.
Kashan Afzal and Zain Afzal were abducted between midnight and
2 a.m. on August 13, 2004, in a raid that involved at least 30
armed Pakistani intelligence agents. The agents broke through the
concrete exterior wall and then broke into the house. No attempt
was made to enter with consent and there were no arrest or search
warrants. Neighbors came out of their homes to see what was
happening, but were ordered to go back inside. Witnesses
identified the abductors as government agents, based on the
vehicles they drove and the manner of the operation.
The intelligence agents, in plainclothes, held the Afzal family
at gunpoint for an hour, threatening to kill them while they
searched the house. They specifically demanded to see the U.S.
passports and all other U.S. government-issued identity papers
held by the brothers. Once the papers were located, they
handcuffed and hooded the brothers, and then left with the
brothers in their custody in a convoy of jeeps and vans typically
used by Pakistan's intelligence agencies and police. Before they
left, they locked the ailing mother of the two men in a bedroom.
According to Zain Afzal:
They said they had come from the "agencies" and that
this was a "raid." They tied my hands, entered the house
and handcuffed my brother. They also broke things in the house.
They asked for all our U.S identity papers––passports, social
security number, driver's licenses and so on. For this purpose,
they untied our hands so we could fetch them. They also took a
licensed gun from our home. We kept asking what was going on but
we got no answer. When my mother asked they said we would be back
in a day or so."
Then they blindfolded us and put us in what looked like a
police vehicle. All this time they had been in radio contact with
others outside or elsewhere. We drove for about an hour and a half
and they took us to some location. When we were inside the
building and our blindfolds were removed. We were in a large
office room and there were about five Pakistani military-type men
there. They said nothing about whom they were other than that they
belonged to "sensitive" agencies and started beatings us
with whips and rods. During this time they kept asking us what our
connections with Jihadis were. I told them that this was a repeat
of what had happened in May and I had told their people everything
and they had let me go. They kept saying "You have links with
Al-Qaeda ... tell us about that" … and I kept repeating my
life history. Though we answered everything, they still kept
beating us.
We were taken to small "cell-type" rooms. They kept
telling us we would be released soon. In the rooms, they kept us
shackled but removed the handcuffs. My brother and I were in
separate cells. I did not see my brother for three months after
this. During these three months, they only gave us daal [lentils]
and roti [bread] to eat. I would ask them where my brother was and
they would say he was fine and in the same place but I never saw
him. They would escort us to the bathroom. I saw a guard at the
main gate in an army uniform. Otherwise we never saw anyone in
uniform. We never went outdoors. We could not tell the difference
between night and day. The cells had no windows and no fans. It
was like a grave–totally closed.
During this time, they took our clothes and gave us what looked
like prison uniforms. I would be beaten regularly during this time
and when I was ill with fever, they refused to give me any
medicine. There were other prisoners there but I could not talk to
them, but I heard people call for water. Occasionally, they would
say "you will go to Cuba" or "we will hand you over
to the FBI." Often I would be beaten for asking for water or
food or medicine.
The brothers told Human Rights Watch that approximately three
months into their detention their captors returned their clothes
and told them that they would be going home soon. According to
Zain Afzal:
They blindfolded me (and other people) and bundled us in a car.
I realized my brother was also in the car as I recognized his
voice. In the car, they made normal conversation with us,"You
must be happy to be going home," and so on. About 30 minutes
later, we arrived at some airport. We knew that as we could hear
planes. They made us climb the metal steps into a small plane. I
knew the plane was small because we had to bend when we
entered––a Fokker perhaps. My brother and I both began to get
worried. They said "You thought we were joking! You are going
to Cuba" We were shackled, handcuffed and blindfolded for the
duration of the flight. One hour and a half, maybe two hours. When
the plane landed, we realized we were not in Cuba. But either in
Pakistan or Afghanistan maybe. The drive from the airport was
about 30 minutes. Once we left the car, I was separated from my
brother again. We were taken somewhere where we went downstairs to
similar underground cells. I asked where we were but the guards
said they did not know. I realized after a while that we were in
Pakistan and that my brother must be close by. The guards all
spoke Urdu. d not know. I realized after a while that we were in
Pakistan and that my brother must be close by. The guards all
spoke Urdu. d not know. I realized after a while that we were in
Pakistan and that my brother must be close by. The guards all
spoke Urdu. d not know. I realized after a while that we were in
Pakistan and that my brother must be close by. The guards all
spoke Urdu. d not know. I realized after a while that we were in
Pakistan and that my brother must be close by. The guards all
spoke Urdu. d not know. I realized after a while that we were in
Pakistan and that my brother must be close by. The guards all
spoke Urdu. d not know. I realized after a while that we were in
Pakistan and that my brother must be close by. The guards all
spoke Urdu. d not know. I realized after a while that we were in
Pakistan and that my brother must be close by. The guards all
spoke Urdu.
Another week to 10 days passed. During this time, the shackles
were removed. We knew it was Ramadan and we were fasting. Maybe
two weeks later, I was blindfolded and taken into another room.
When my blindfold was removed I saw a Pakistani army man in plain
clothes and two white men who flashed FBI badges and said that
they had come from the U.S to investigate me. They asked me my
life history all over again. I told them everything. Then they
showed me photographs and told me that the pictures were of al-Qaeda
members. "Do you know them?" they asked. I saw the
photos and told them I recognized no one, knew nothing. … The
FBI officer said "We have been told you and your brother have
al-Qaeda links." The FBI officers seemed to be in their 30's.
This interrogation went on for 3-4 hours. During this time I told
them everything about myself all over again. After that I was
blindfolded and taken back into my cell. I knew nothing about my
brother's whereabouts at this time. I told the FBI that I was
illegally detained and had been tortured. They said they would try
to help but that all decisions were to be taken by Pakistani
authorities and Pakistan was beyond their jurisdiction.ed and had
been tortured. They said they would try to help but that all
decisions were to be taken by Pakistani authorities and Pakistan
was beyond their jurisdiction.ed and had been tortured. They said
they would try to help but that all decisions were to be taken by
Pakistani authorities and Pakistan was beyond their
jurisdiction.ed and had been tortured. They said they would try to
help but that all decisions were to be taken by Pakistani
authorities and Pakistan was beyond their jurisdiction.ed and had
been tortured. They said they would try to help but that all
decisions were to be taken by Pakistani authorities and Pakistan
was beyond their jurisdiction.ed and had been tortured. They said
they would try to help but that all decisions were to be taken by
Pakistani authorities and Pakistan was beyond their
jurisdiction.ed and had been tortured. They said they would try to
help but that all decisions were to be taken by Pakistani
authorities and Pakistan was beyond their jurisdiction.ed and had
been tortured. They said they would try to help but that all
decisions were to be taken by Pakistani authorities and Pakistan
was beyond their jurisdiction.
About 7-10 days later, the same FBI officers and Pakistan Army
officer showed me new pictures and asked if I knew these people.
They again asked me about links to Al-Qaeda. ... I asked them that
they had already held me and my brother for five months and how
much longer did they intend to hold us? I told them I had never
been involved in a criminal act. If you have any proof, then show
it to me. Or at least tell me how long this will take. I asked to
be presented in court and to be given a lawyer. The FBI agents did
not respond to the request for a lawyer or my demand to be
presented in court and charged. They did tell me that "we
annot say what your crime is and how long you will be held. But
you are a terrorist and you could be taken to Cuba."
The next day my brother joined me in my cell. My brother and I
told each other what had been happening to us. He told me that the
same things had been happening to him. We saw other prisoners
including women and children. Once when we were being walked
across to an interrogation, my blindfold was not tied properly and
I saw many cars in a car park with Lahore number plates. I began
to suspect we were in Lahore. We felt helpless and defenseless. We
were treated worse than animals. But during this period, we were
not beaten. We had regular interrogations, sometimes just with
Pakistani military officers.
Maybe in January or February, we were interrogated by the FBI
again, after about a gap of a month and a half. This time there
were different officers––two men and a woman who again showed
us their badges. They asked the same questions all over again and
I gave the same answers all over again. This also lasted about 90
minutes or so. By this time, it seemed we would remain imprisoned
for the rest of our lives. They never even asked us different
questions … the same questions every time. My brother had become
very ill with tuberculosis. They called a doctor to see him who
came in a Pakistan army uniform. He prescribed medication.
Periodically we would be told that we were being sent to Cuba.
Both the FBI and the Pakistan Army kept forcing us to admit our
"guilt," to admit we were al-Qaeda members and that we
were planning attacks in Pakistan and in the U.S. They just wanted
an admission.
Zain Afzal recounted that in another session with the FBI:
I asked them that they had already held me and my brother for
five months and how much longer did they intend to hold us? I told
them I had never been involved in a criminal act. If you have any
proof, then show it to me. Or at least tell me how long this will
take. I asked to be presented in court and to be given a lawyer.
The FBI agents did not respond to the request for a lawyer or my
demand to be presented in court and charged. They did tell me
that, 'We cannot say what your crime is and how long you will be
held. But you are a terrorist and you could be taken to
Cuba.'"
A few weeks before his release, Zain Afzal says he told his
captors:
If you think we are guilty of a crime please charge us in court
or release us. I pointed out that my brother was very ill. They
said "we are the court."
The brothers claim they were released with one final threat:
Our last interrogation took place about 10 days before our
release and for the first time my brother and I were called
together. They said "Your case is almost over" and
"You will be released soon. ... But we will only release you
on condition that you will never speak to the press or media or
speak against us. Your well-being lies in silence otherwise you
and your family will be in big trouble." Then they made us
write a statement that said that we had not been held by any
government or semi-government agency and were writing this
statement of our own free will. A week later, we were given
clothes, blindfolded and taken to Lahore Airport where the
blindfolds were removed. We were handed two PIA [Pakistan
International Airlines] tickets to Karachi that were not in our
names. We asked for our American passports and other ID and were
told that our stuff would be delivered to us in Karachi. This
happened on April 22. So we returned home. The second or third day
after our return, the "agencies" called us and reminded
us of our "commitment." I asked for our passports again
and was told they would reach us soon. We have not received our
passports and though we have also requested the U.S. Consulate in
Karachi to reissue the passports, we have had no response.
Human Rights Watch called on the Pakistani authorities to
return the U.S. passports and other personal material confiscated
from the brothers when they were illegally detained. The United
States embassy should issue new passports immediately upon request
if the passports are not promptly returned.
Human Rights Watch urged the Pakistani government to take
immediate steps to end its practice of illegal arrest and
detention of persons as part of the "war on terror" and
to end the use of torture and other mistreatment. Many terrorism
suspects in Pakistan have routinely been held without any rights
to a hearing before a judge, the right to counsel or family
visits, and without receiving a trial meeting international fair
trial standards. Human Rights Watch called on the Pakistani
government and security services to end the use of secret
detention facilities and to identify all such facilities
immediately.
"If President Musharraf want to convince the world that he
is indeed an enlightened moderate, he needs to immediately order
an end to such rampant and abusive practices," said Adams.
"The hidden prison system run by the security services is an
open secret in Pakistan. No self-respecting government should
tolerate such a system."
Human Rights Watch also called on the Bush administration to
provide full information on its role in the Afzal case.
Specifically, the U.S. must clarify whether the Afzal brothers
were held in Pakistani custody at the request of the United
States, and state the policy of the U.S. government when it knows
or has reason to know that persons being questioned abroad are
being seriously mistreated by their captors. The Convention
against Torture, to which the United States is a party, prohibits
"an act by any person which constitutes complicity or
participation in torture."
"The war on terror cannot be won by resorting to illegal
detentions and torture," said Adams. "It is time for the
U.S. to decide whether it will continue to be complicit in
criminal activity in its fight against terrorism, or whether the
rule of law will prevail."
Human Rights Watch expressed no opinion on whether the Afzal
brothers--or others who are "disappeared," illegally
detained, or tortured by the Pakistani security services as part
of the "war on terror"--have committed criminal acts.
However, international law prohibits "disappearances,"
illegal detentions, or torture at all times, including during
investigations of alleged terrorism.
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