A Pakistani court has charged five young Americans with
planning terrorist attacks in the South Asian country and
conspiring to wage war against nations allied with Pakistan,
their defence lawyer said.
Pakistani police officers with detained American Muslims
leave a police station to send them into prison in
Sargodha, Pakistan. A Pakistani court has charged the five
young Americans with planning terrorist attacks in the
South Asian country and conspiring to wage war against
nations allied with Pakistan. Photo by AP.
The men - all Muslims from the Washington suburb of
Alexandria, Virginia - pleaded not guilty to a total of five
charges, the most severe of which carries a maximum sentence of
life in prison, defense lawyer Hasan Dastagir told The
Associated Press.
"My clients were in good shape and high spirits," Dastagir
said.
The men, all in their late teens or early 20s, were charged
by an anti-terrorism court inside a prison in Sargodha, the
city in Punjab province where they were arrested in December.
They were reported missing by their families in November
after one left behind a farewell video showing scenes of war
and casualties and saying Muslims must be defended.
Their lawyer has said they were heading to Afghanistan and
had no plans to stage attacks inside Pakistan.
The court also charged the men with planning attacks on
Afghan and US territory, said Dastagir. The charges did not
specify what was meant by US territory but could be a
reference to American bases or diplomatic outposts in
Afghanistan.
The men also were charged with contributing cash to banned
organizations to be used for terrorism and with directing
each other to commit terrorist acts.
"This last charge carries life in prison while the rest of
the charges have lesser punishments," Dastagir said.
The trial will begin on March 31, and the prosecution is
slated to present more than 20 witnesses. The defenve plans
to bring witnesses from the U.S. and provide evidence of
community service carried out by the men back home.
Pakistani police have publicly made several accusations
against the young men, claiming the suspects contacted
Pakistani-based jihadi groups. They accused the five of using
the social networking site Facebook and video-sharing site
YouTube while they were in the US to try to connect with
extremist groups in Pakistan.
During past court hearings, the men have claimed they were
tortured by Pakistani police and FBI agents. Pakistan and the
US have denied those allegations.
Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on
American-Islamic Relations, said in a phone interview
Wednesday from Washington that the parents of the five have
received letters from their children detailing the alleged
torture, including beatings and threats of electrocution.
In one letter, dated March 10, one of the five writes, "They
beat the hell out of me and the rest of us until we said what
they wanted us to say. Wallahi (by God) they even threatened
to electrocute us the day before court so we don't tell the
judge but we spoke out."
The letter refers to an earlier note written on toilet paper
that they tossed out from a vehicle as they were taken away
from a previous court appearance in which they also alleged
torture.
"All the things we wrote on the toilet paper are true," the
letter states. "By the way did news of the paper go all over
the news even in the US -- tell me about it."
The portion of the letter provided by Awad did not include
the signature, so it was unclear which of the five wrote it.
Awad said he received the letter from one of the men's
parents.
Authorities in the United States and Pakistan have denied
accusations of torture, and skeptics have said that would-be
terrorists are trained to allege torture if caught as a form
of propaganda.
The US has pressed an often-reluctant Pakistan to crack down
on militants in its territory, many of whom are believed
involved in attacks on American and NATO forces across the
border in Afghanistan. At the same time, several recent cases
have highlighted incidences of foreigners signing up to join
the insurgents on both sides of the border.
The men have been identified as Ramy Zamzam of Egyptian
descent, Waqar Khan and Umar Farooq of Pakistani descent, and
Aman Hassan Yemer and Ahmed Minni of Ethiopian descent.
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