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Pakistani Court Overturns Conviction in 2002 Killing of Daniel Pearl


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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A Pakistani court on Thursday overturned the murder conviction and death sentence of Ahmed Omar Sheikh, a British-born militant who had been convicted of masterminding the 2002 abduction and killing of the American journalist Daniel Pearl, lawyers said.

The court also overturned the convictions of three other men who had been serving life sentences in the case. All four men were expected to be freed soon, lawyers said.

Mr. Pearl, a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, was abducted in January 2002 in the city of Karachi, while working on an article about Pakistani militant groups with links to Al Qaeda. He was later beheaded.

A two-member bench of the Sindh High Court in Karachi, headed by Justice Mohammad Karim Khan Agha, found that there had been sufficient evidence to convict Mr. Sheikh of kidnapping, but not of murder, said Mr. Sheikh’s lawyer, Khawaja Naveed Ahmed. “The court ruled that the charge of abduction was proven,” he said.

The court reduced Mr. Sheikh’s sentence to seven years. Because he has been imprisoned for 18 years, he was expected to go free along with Fahad Saleem, Syed Salman Saqib and Sheikh Muhammad Adil, the three other men whose convictions were overturned, Mr. Ahmed said.

Daniel Pearl’s father, Dr. Judea Pearl, speaking in Miami Beach, Fla., in 2007.
Daniel Pearl’s father, Dr. Judea Pearl, speaking in Miami Beach, Fla., in 2007

Lawyers said the court had not yet issued a detailed ruling, only a brief order.

Still, Steven Butler, the Asia program coordinator at the Committee to Protect Journalists, said the organization was “deeply disappointed.”

“We urge prosecutors to appeal the decision, which found Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh guilty only of kidnapping Pearl in a crime that led directly to his murder,” Mr. Butler said in a statement.

 

Amjad Hussain Farooqi, a close associate of Mr. Sheikh, was fatally shot by the police in 2004. Mr. Farooqi was believed to have picked up Mr. Pearl on the night of the abduction and driven him to a place in Karachi where he was held and killed.

In 2014, Mohammad Hashim Qadeer, another main suspect in the murder, was acquitted by a court in Hyderabad for lack of evidence.

Mr. Sheikh, a British citizen who was trained in camps in Pakistan and Afghanistan, belonged to the militant group Jaish-e-Muhammad at the time of his 2002 arrest. Pakistani investigators said Mr. Sheikh lured Mr. Pearl by offering him an interview with an Islamic cleric who had ties to Richard C. Reid, the so-called shoe bomber, who was accused of trying to blow up a trans-Atlantic flight in December 2001 with explosives in his sneakers.

Mr. Sheikh has made headlines from his cell over the years. In 2008, soon after Pakistani militants carried out terrorist attacks in Mumbai, Mr. Sheikh managed to place a call to Pakistan’s president at the time, Asif Ali Zardari, pretending to be the Indian foreign minister and warning of an attack by India. In 2016, the Pakistani military announced that it had foiled a plan to free Mr. Sheikh from prison.

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Pearl was a classically trained violinist, an avid fiddler and a creative mandolin player. He solidified his professional passion as a Stanford undergraduate. He co-founded a student newspaper called the Stanford Commentator, a publication devoted to exploring multiple sides of contentious issues. He was a reporter for KZSU, the campus radio station. Pearl graduated from Stanford in 1985 with a BA in communication, with Phi Beta Kappa honors.

Pearl’s journalism career led him from reporting local news to the Wall Street Journal, where he specialized in foreign coverage. He was the Journal’s Southeast Asia bureau chief, where he was doggedly pursuing stories on the U.S. war on terrorism that followed the 9/11 attacks.

In January 2002, Pearl was in Karachi, Pakistan, on his way to what he thought was an interview when he was kidnapped. His abductors initially demanded the release of Pakistani detainees at the U.S. naval base at Guatanamo Bay, where captured al Qaeda and Taliban fighters were held. The kidnappers accused Pearl of being a spy – an accusation strongly denied by the CIA and Wall Street Journal – and vowed to kill Pearl if their demands were not met.

Photos of Pearl handcuffed with a gun at his head and holding up a newspaper were released. The horrific image was seared into the mind of the international community. The kidnappers did not respond to public pleas for release of Pearl by his editor, Paul Steiger, and his wife, Mariane. U.S. and Pakistani intelligence forces tried to track down the kidnappers.

Nine days after the abduction, the terrorists killed Pearl by beheading. His remains were found five months later 30 miles outside of Karachi.

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