ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani neuroscientist, who has been in a high-security American prison on terrorism charges, had an emotional reunion with her sister after about two decades of separation, announced a Pakistani parliamentarian on Wednesday who played a role in arranging the meeting.
Dr. Aafia Siddiqui gained international attention after she was arrested in 2003 and was later convicted by a US court for attempting to kill US military personnel in Afghanistan and was sentenced to 86 years in prison. The US also suspected her of having connections to Al-Qaeda.
The Pakistani neuroscientist’s interaction with her sister, Dr. Fowzia Siddiqui, took place under strict surveillance and limitations.
“The meeting took place after 20 years and continued for two and a half hours,” Senator Mushtaq Ahmad Khan of rightwing Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) party wrote in a Twitter post. “Dr. Fowzia was not allowed to hug or shake hands with Aafia. Dr. Fowzia was also not allowed to show Dr. Aafia pictures of her children. [The meeting took place] in one of the prison rooms where there was a thick glass wall in the middle and they could see each other through it.”
Fowzia Siddiqui has been tirelessly campaigning for her sister’s freedom for years. Her efforts also gained global recognition after numerous human rights organizations and individuals raised their voice in support of her cause.
The Pakistani senator also mentioned that Aafia Siddiqui narrated the hardships she faced in the prison. He informed that her health had also deteriorated in captivity, adding she had developed hearing impairment after suffering an injury to her head.
Khan said the overall situation was alarming, though it had now become possible for people to meet the Pakistani scientist in prison.
“It is necessary now for the people to raise their voice and force the [Pakistani] rulers to take up the issue of Aafia’s release with the American government,” he added.
The Pakistani senator will also meet Aafia Siddiqui in prison on Thursday. He will be accompanied by Dr. Fowzia Siddiqui and Clive Stafford-Smith, a British attorney who works on civil rights issues and helped Guantanamo detainees in the past.
Smith also tweeted about the emotional reunion of the two sisters, describing the interaction as “tough 2.5 hours” for Fowzia Siddiqui.
“I miss my family every day,” he quoted the Pakistani scientist as saying in a graphic that accompanied his social media post. “My mother, my father, you [my sister], my children, I think of them all the time.”
Last year in July, the two sisters lost their mother, though Khan said Aafia Siddiqui was still not aware of the tragic development.