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Home Front: WoT
Pak journalist in US jail on terrorism charges
2008-07-28
Nayyar Zaidi, the well-known US-based Pakistani-American journalist, who has been a citizen of the United States for more than 30 years has been in US custody for the last four months on what are said to be terrorism-related charges.

According to one report, Zaidi is being held on the charge of "obstruction of justice", a very serious offence. He is also said to be awaiting a trial. The Homeland Security Department or the FBI have made no announcement about his arrest or incarceration. His family, when asked for his whereabouts, has continued to claim that "he is in Pakistan". The Pakistan embassy, like Zaidi's journalist colleagues, who have repeatedly phoned the family, has also been given the same answer. When asked why he is in Pakistan and what has taken him there or how long he is to be away, the callers have been told, "We cannot say" or "We do not know." The news of Zaidi's arrest -- he is believed to be in an Ohio prison -- was broken by the New Jersey-based website Des Prades at the weekend.

However, there is a history to this story. On Feb. 20, 2003, Zaidi was visited by three FBI agents at his residence in Prince County, Virginia, while he was away from home. The three agents tried to interrogate Zaidi's 15-year old son Zain Zaidi, who immediately phoned his father but by the time he got home, the agents were gone, leaving a phone number that they said he should reach them at. When Zaidi called that number, he was asked to come over to the FBI's Washington field office and asked several questions about his personal, social and religious activities. The agent questioning him, also asked him to bring his phone notebook with him because of an FBI claim that Zaidi's home phone had been used for making calls to 10 numbers in Pakistan, China, India, the Netherlands and Thailand. Those numbers, an agent by the name of Chris MdKinney, added, were under investigation for links to the events of Sept. 11, 2001. The Pakistan number, Zaidi told the FBI, bore similarity to a fax number that he often called in Karachi to file his news and other reports.

Zaidi has filed for the Jang Group of Newspapers for more than 25 years. The Pakistan phone number was officially investigated by Pakistani authorities, which found it to be the disconnected number of a textile company that had gone bankrupt. When Zaidi asked to be given other numbers that had allegedly been called from his phone, the request was refused. Zaidi offered to cooperate with the FBI but refused to hand over his phone notebook or any records unless the agents came up with legal grounds to make such a demand. He was left alone until August 8, 2003 when two different FBI agents came to his home while he was away. When he called them on August 11, leaving three messages, his calls were not returned. The embassy also took up the issue of this FBI intrusion with the State Department, which promised to look into the matter. Nothing more was heard of it till Zaidi's mysterious disappearnce in late March this year.
Posted by:Fred

#5  Original Article?

"Mr. Zaidi called me up today from the Northeast Correctional Center in Youngstown, Ohio.

[...]

Mr Zaidi said he had gone to Ohio to pursue his journalistic "obstruction of justice" research against those individuals who are being detained there from "all over the world". Unfortunately, he ended up being detained himself in the same facility, he said. "

Comments section of the article:

"Nayyar's weekly column is being published regularly in Jang Group's magazine, "Akhbar-i-Jahan." How come he could not inform the magazine about his arrest while sending his columns? "
Posted by: Elminemble Bucket5530   2008-07-28 10:32  

#4  However, there is a history to this story. On Feb. 20, 2003, Zaidi was visited by three FBI agents at his residence in Prince County, Virginia, while he was away from home.

Appears to be a.... typical FBI, well planned and thoughtout visit.
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-07-28 09:01  

#3  Zaidi is being held on the charge of "obstruction of justice", a very serious offence.

You might not want to burn this guy at the stake quite yet. This is what they charge people with when the don't have anything to charge them for. The FBI sounds like it is getting a little ways off their leash on this one. You cant charge a guy with obstruction of justice for not giving evidence against himself. That is what the 5th Amendment is for.
Posted by: Helmuth, Speaking for Phinelet3888   2008-07-28 08:58  

#2  Prince County? Prince William, perhaps, though it could be Edward or George.
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2008-07-28 07:22  

#1  the New Jersey-based website Des Prades

Must be a pretty obscure site.

There is a London-based weekly called Des Prades; it's published in Pashtun.
Posted by: Pappy   2008-07-28 00:25  

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