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Pakistani
government may hand over kidnapping suspect
By
AFZAL NADEEM
Associated Press
KARACHI, Pakistan
A Pakistani court on Tuesday set aside a petition to prevent
the handover of the key suspect in the slaying of Wall Street Journal
reporter Daniel Pearl to the United States, after the government
promised not to do so in violation of the law, the prosecutor said.
The government
promise appeared to leave the door open to handing over British-born
Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh through means in accordance with Pakistani
law.
Interior Ministry
spokesman Abdul Rasheed Khan said the law requires defendants facing
charges in Pakistan to be tried at home first before being transferred
to any other country.
In the capital, Islamabad, President Gen. Pervez Musharrafs
spokesman said the United States had been formally notified of Pakistans
decision to try Saeed here first. The spokesman, Maj. Gen. Rashid
Quereshi, said the notification had been conveyed to the U.S. Embassy,
which declined to comment.
With no extradition
treaty between the United States and Pakistan, officials have been
trying to find a legal way to hand over Saeed, believed to have
planned the kidnapping of Pearl, South Asia bureau chief for the
Wall Street Journal. The government here has made no unequivocal
pledge to do so.
Pearl was kidnapped
here Jan. 23 while researching links between Pakistani extremists
and Richard C. Reid, who was arrested in December on a Paris-Miami
flight he allegedly boarded with explosives in his sneakers. A tape
received Feb. 22 showed Pearl dead. His body has not been found.
Sadia, the wife
of Saeed, asked the court Friday to block moves to hand over her
husband. On Tuesday, the government lawyers assured the court that
Saeed wont be handed over to any foreign authority or
officer in violation to the law, chief prosecutor Raja Quereshi
said.
The court set
aside the petition after Sadias lawyer expressed satisfaction
over governments assurance, said Quereshi, who is no relation
to the government spokesman.
Pakistan is
under pressure from the United States to hand over Saeed, who was
indicted by the U.S. authorities for the 1994 kidnapping of another
American in India. Khan, of the Interior Ministry, said that so
far, Pakistan has not received a formal extradition request from
the United States.
Saeed faces
kidnapping and murder charges in Pakistan but simply one kidnap
charge in the United States. He has not been indicted in the United
States for the Pearl kidnap-slaying.
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