Sr Aafia Siddiqui Case Updates: Lawyer demands to shift her Hospital

lawyer for Aafia Sidiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist charged with trying to kill American interrogators in Afghanistan, has made a fervent plea to U.S. authorities to immediately shift her client to a hospital in view of her worsening state of health.

“Her condition has significantly deteriorated since August four when she was brought to New York,” an angry Elizabeth Fink told a press conference in a Brooklyn park, a block away from a federal prison where she is being held under harsh conditions.

“She (Dr. Siddiqui) should be transferred to Bellevue hospital for urgent medical and psychological treatment,” the lawyer added.

Ms. Fink expressed her outrage that even after a court ordered medical examination, Dr. Siddiqui, despite her life-threatening condition, did not receive the recommended treatment. She described the U.S. authorities’ indifference towards her client as “cruel and inhuman” and in violation of American laws.
She also said that the U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia (the prosecutor) informed her through a letter on Friday that an 11-year-old boy detained along with Dr. Siddiqui appears to be the Pakistani woman’s son.

Unlike Dr. Siddiqui, who is being held in the Metropolitan Detention Centre, the boy is in the custody of Afghan authorities, Ms. Fink said, adding that the child, who appeared confused, has been interrogated by FBI agents several times.

According to the letter, she said, the results of a DNA test showed the boy’s DNA “was consistent with that of a potential offspring of Aafia Siddiqui.”

More tests are being done, the letter said, and they should be completed this week. U.S. authorities also compared a passport photo of Dr. Siddiqui’s son, Mohammed Ahmed, to the boy held in Afghanistan and believed they appeared to be the same person. He was born in Boston and was therefore an American citizen, it said.

“The child is an American citizen, he is not a Pakistani citizen,” Ms. Fink said. She said the State Department should collect the child from the Afghan authorities.

Ms. Fink voiced her deep concern over the medical condition of Dr. Siddiqui, who was shot twice in the stomach when she was arrested by U.S. authorities, after she allegedly attempted to kill American personnel using a guard’s rifle.

Ms. Siddiqui has recently refused to meet with her lawyers, Ms. Fink said, because the prison which holds her changed its policy and now requires Ms. Siddiqui to undergo a full strip search before meeting visitors. The abdominal wound and other health problems recently observed during a medical examination make it too painful for Siddiqui to undergo an invasive full-body search, Ms. Fink said, calling the procedure “dehumanizing and degrading.”.

At a recent court appearance, Siddiqui was hunched over in a wheelchair, obviously in pain. Her bail hearing is scheduled for September 3, when she is expected to be indicted.

“She has been significantly traumatized and she needs immediate help,” Ms. Fink added.

SOURCE: APP.com.pk

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