Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Pearl’s family to challenge order freeing Sheikh

- Agence France-Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

ISLAMABAD: The family of American journalist Daniel Pearl will challenge an order by Pakistan’s top court to release a British-born militant acquitted of mastermind­ing his kidnapping and brutal murder in 2002.

The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld the acquittal of Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh and three other men last year, triggering outrage from the United States.

Pearl was the South Asia bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal when he was abducted and beheaded by jihadists in Karachi in January 2002 while researchin­g a story about Islamist militants.

“The Pearl family intends to file a review petition against the illegal and unjust majority decision,” parents Ruth and Judea Pearl said in a statement that was tweeted by the murdered journalist’s friend and former Wall Street Journal colleague Asra Nomani.

They join both the federal government and Sindh provincial government - of which the city of Karachi is the capital - in launching a plea for the latest verdict to be reviewed.

Lawyers for Pearl’s family have argued that Sheikh played a crucial role in organising the abduction and detention of the journalist before ordering his captors to kill him.

Defence lawyers, however, say he was a scapegoat and sentenced on insufficie­nt evidence

“It is beyond belief that Ahmad Omar Sheikh -- who after 18 years of lies, had finally admitted in a handwritte­n letter to the court his role in the kidnapping for ransom of Daniel

Pearl -- has been given a clean slate and let loose once again upon the world to continue his internatio­nal terrorist activities,” Pearl’s family said in the statement.

The four men - who have been detained under the emergency orders of Sindh government since their acquittal last year still have multiple court challenges linked to their case.

Sheikh, a British-born jihadist who once studied at the London School of Economics and had been involved in previous kidnapping­s of foreigners, was arrested days after Pearl’s abduction.

He was later sentenced to death.

US President Joe Biden’s administra­tion was “outraged by the Pakistani Supreme Court’s decision”, White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki told reporters last week.

The new US secretary of state, Antony J Blinken, on Friday spoke with Pakistan’s foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, pressing his “concern about the potential release of these prisoners”, a spokesman for the US department of state said.

 ?? AFP ?? A file photo of Daniel Pearl, who was killed in 2002.
AFP A file photo of Daniel Pearl, who was killed in 2002.

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