Close X
Thursday, October 10, 2024
ADVT 
International

Man Who Helped US Find Osama Bin Laden May Soon Be Released From Pak Jail

IANS, 01 May, 2018 12:18 PM
    Dr Shakil Afridi, a Pakistani doctor serving a 33-year jail term for helping the CIA in tracking down al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden to Abbottabad in 2011 could be released this month after authorities remitted 10 years of his sentence, according to his lawyer.
     
     
    The US has been pressing Pakistan to release Dr Afridi, who was involved in a CIA-linked plan to find bin Laden with a fake vaccination operation in the Pakistani garrison city of Abbottabad.
     
     
    Advocate Qamar Nadeem told the BBC Urdu service that Dr Afridi, who has received several remissions in sentence, will complete his jail term this month.
     
     
    He said that Dr Afridi was awarded a total of 33 years jail term on four different charges in which he was awarded 30 years on three counts while three years on one. However, after an approval of his appeal, 10 years of imprisonment had been remitted, the Express Tribune reported.
     
     
    According to Mr Nadeem, if Dr Afridi's total jail term and remissions are taken into consideration, then he is likely to be freed this month.
     
     
    Dr Afridi, 56, was shifted to Adiala Jail of Rawalpindi from Peshawar central jail on Friday, apparently due to security concerns.
     
     
    According to media reports, he was moved in a helicopter but no official statement was issued by the government. However, it is still not clear as to whether he will be kept in Adiala jail or shifted to another location, the report said.
     
     
    There is a chance that after his release, Dr Afridi might move to the US to settle there permanently, it said.
     
     
    A team of expert doctors has reportedly examined him in Adiala jail and declared him completely fit. According to jail sources, he has been kept under strict security measures and additional guards have been posted at his barracks, it said.
     
     
    Dr Afridi, the former surgeon of Khyber Agency, had run a false vaccination campaign in the Pakistani garrison city of Abbottabad to help the CIA track down bin Laden in his compound and kill him in a raid by US Navy Seals on May 2, 2011.
     
     
    He was arrested from Peshawar later that year.
     
     
    In 2012, he was sentenced to 33 years in prison by the political administration of Khyber Agency under the Frontier Crimes Regulation, the colonial-era laws that govern the tribal regions, for having links with banned militant groups.
     
     
    The issue of Dr Afridi's release is reportedly one of the major obstacles to the improvement of ties between the US and Pakistan.
     
     
    Soon after the death of bin Laden, the US media reported that Dr Afridi had contributed to the success of the CIA operation by collecting DNA samples of bin Laden's family through the fake vaccination campaign in Abbottabad.
     
     
    Two years ago, US President Donald Trump had said during his campaign for presidential elections that he could have Dr Afridi released in two minutes and he was certain that the Pakistani officials would not object, the report said.
     
     
    The US State Department has previously said that Dr Afridi has been unjustly imprisoned in Pakistan and Washington has clearly communicated its position to Islamabad in his case, both in public and in private.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker

    Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker
    Reports indicate this could have been a hate crime, which makes this unacceptable attack all the more horrifying," Congressman Joe Crowley, chairman of the Democratic Caucus, said in a statement.

    Attack On Sikh Cab Driver Troubling: Top US Lawmaker

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report
    Abhishek Gattani, 38, pleaded "no contest" when his wife approached the police

    Indian-Origin CEO In US Beats Wife; Offered 1 Month Jail: Report

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago
    Three women dressed in burqas killed a man who had been accused of blasphemy in 2004 in a northeastern Pakistani town, police said on Thursday, the second brutal killing over alleged insults to Islam in a week.

    Pakistani Women Track Down, Kill Man Accused Of Blasphemy A Decade Ago

    'You're A Disgrace! Go Back To India': Woman Yells At Ireland Train Passengers

    'You're A Disgrace! Go Back To India': Woman Yells At Ireland Train Passengers
    A woman hurled racist abuse at passengers on a train in Ireland, telling one of them to "f*** off back to India" after he placed a bag on an empty seat.

    'You're A Disgrace! Go Back To India': Woman Yells At Ireland Train Passengers

    Indian-American CEO Who Made Maid 'Sleep Near Dogs' Told To Pay $135k

    Indian-American CEO Who Made Maid 'Sleep Near Dogs' Told To Pay $135k
    An Indian-American CEO has been ordered to pay US$ 135,000 to her former domestic worker after a Labour Department investigation found she underpaid and mistreated her.

    Indian-American CEO Who Made Maid 'Sleep Near Dogs' Told To Pay $135k

    Indo-US Hotelier Vikram Chatwal Gets Community Service In Dog-Torching Incident

    Indo-US Hotelier Vikram Chatwal Gets Community Service In Dog-Torching Incident
    Prominent Indian-American hotelier Vikram Chatwal has been ordered to do five days of community service and barred from owning a pet for five years for trying to set two dogs on fire.

    Indo-US Hotelier Vikram Chatwal Gets Community Service In Dog-Torching Incident