Man demanding freedom of Aafia Siddiqui killed by US police
The man who held hostages inside a Texas synagogue demanded the freedom of Aafia Siddiqui who is imprisoned on pretext of trying to kill American soldiers in Afghanistan.
The man allegedly stormed the synagogue in Colleyville for Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist, who is incarcerated at Carswell Air Force Base near Fort Worth.
According to police sources, the man held at least four people hostages in the synagogue for nearly 12 hours, and released one hostage unharmed earlier in the evening.
The hostage-taker were killed after police attacked the building.
Who is Aafia Siddiqui?
Dr. Aafia Siddiqui was born in Karachi in 1972 and studied medicine in America. She studied medicine at MIT [Massachusetts Institute of Technology], studied neurology and graduated as a brain surgeon.
After completing her education, she returned to her country and started wearing a headscarf there.
Returning home after completing her studies, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui went to the airport with her three children to visit her mother from Islamabad to Karachi in 2003. After that date, she disappears mysteriously and there was no news heard from the young doctor and her children for the next five years.
According to Siddiqui, she was kidnapped on the way to the airport that day. She said that the kidnappers separated her children Ahmad, Maryam, and her baby from her on that day.
The last thing she remembered was that she had injected a medicine from her arm that day. Then she opens her eyes in a prison cell. She believes she was currently on a military base in Afghanistan. Because she was hearing warplanes land and takeoff.
Siddiqui said she had been alone in this prison cell for more than five years. She was questioned by the Americans without wearing masks and uniforms.
They made her listened to her children's terrifying screams for days. In the meantime, she just had the opportunity to see her baby Suleiman behind frosted glass. They also showed her 7-years-old son Ahmed's photograph laying down in blood. They said Maryam have died of a disease.
Siddiqui said she was forced to write hundreds of pages of dirty bombs and biological attack weapons with viruses.
Missing in 2003, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui was found in 2008. Kidnapped with her three children, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui was detained by Pakistani police and sold to the United States for money.
All these information is learned from the research of the famous journalist Yvonne Ridley, who was then taken hostage by the Taliban in Afghanistan and then converted to Islam.
Ridley's study on the Pakistani woman reveals that she disappeared in 2003 when she went to the airport to travel from Karachi to Islamabad with her three children.
No one knows what happened to her after that time, but only in the American press reports that this woman was arrested and handed over to American forces by Pakistani police.
In February, 2010, Dr. Aafia was tried and convicted in a US Federal court on charges of attempted murder and assaulting US servicemen in Ghazni, Afghanistan. The official charges against Dr. Aafia were that she assaulted U.S. soldiers in Ghazni, Afghanistan, with one of the servicemen’s own rifles, while she was in their custody, waiting to be interrogated by them.
No US personnel were hurt but Dr. Aafia was shot and suffered serious injuries including brain damage. Dr Aafia categorically denies these charges. The forensic and physical evidence denies those charges
American Intelligence has been keeping Dr. Aafia Siddiqui with massive persecution for 11 years, with the lie that she was Al-Qaeda's agent. (ILKHA)