Pakistani jailed over bin Laden 'in bad health'
AFP, Thursday 24 May 2012
A jail official says that the Pakistani doctor is in 'bad health condition' after facing a 33-year imprisonment sentence for helping the CIA find Osama bin Laden


The Pakistani doctor sentenced to 33 years for treason after being recruited by the CIA to help find Osama bin Laden is in poor health, a jail official told AFP on Thursday.

"His health condition is bad, a team of doctors will examine him in jail today," Samad Khan told AFP from the central prison in the northwestern city of Peshawar, where officials have said Shakeel Afridi is being held.

"He has been kept away from other prisoners to avert any danger to his life," Khan said, without elaborating further on Afridi's condition.

On Wednesday, officials announced that the surgeon had been convicted and jailed for 33 years under the archaic tribal justice system that has governed Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal belt since British colonial rule.

A court operating under the Frontier Crimes Regulations (FCR), which date back to the 19th century, found him guilty of waging war against the state.

Afridi comes from Khyber, one of the seven districts that make up the tribal belt.

But critics said he should not have been tried under tribal law for an alleged crime that took place outside tribal jurisdiction, in the town of Abbottabad where he ran a fake vaccination programme designed to collect bin Laden family DNA.

A senior official in Khyber, Nasir Khan, defended Afridi's trial.

"We have powers to try a resident of FATA (the federally administered tribal areas) under the FCR enforced in tribal areas," he told AFP.

"The trial was kept secret so that no one can attack him. We did not reveal even the name of the jirga members to avoid any risk," he said.

There have been conflicting accounts about whether Afridi was present during the proceedings.

Nasir Khan said he had appeared on Wednesday when the verdict was announced in Peshawar.

Under the FCR, cases are heard by a five to seven-member jirga, or council of tribal elders, along with two officials from the local political administration, he explained.

Khan said Afridi's trial lasted two months and that he was given full opportunity to defend himself, but was not entitled to a lawyer.

Afridi's punishment was meted out under the Pakistani penal code, Khan said.

He has the right to appeal either to a tribunal or directly to the Peshawar high court, which has in several cases either remitted or annulled tribal sentences, he added.

The tribunal is made up of three former senior civil servants.

https://english.ahram.org.eg/News/42606.aspx