Official: Pakistani court stays possible deportation of 5 Americans held on terror suspicions

By Babar Dogar, AP
Monday, December 14, 2009

Pakistan court stays deporting of Americans

LAHORE, Pakistan — A top Pakistani court on Monday ruled that five Americans being held on suspicion of terror links cannot be deported back to the U.S. or any other country before judges review the case, an official said.

Pakistani police have alleged that the five young Muslim men wanted to join militants in Pakistan’s northwest tribal areas before going to Afghanistan. The men are accused of using Facebook and YouTube sites to try to connect with extremist groups in Pakistan.

They have not been formally charged with any crime in Pakistan or produced in court. No deportation order is known to have been issued — though officials from the U.S. and Pakistan have said deportation back to America is likely.

Lahore High Court registrar Tahir Pervez said the court wants more information before such a move is allowed.

The court made the move in response to a petition from Khalid Khawaja, a civil rights activist who has often filed court cases on behalf of alleged militants and people believed to have disappeared at the hands of Pakistan’s vast security apparatus.

Pervez said the court ordered the government of Punjab province to file a report on the case in a hearing Thursday.

The men were picked up by Pakistani authorities last week in the Punjab town of Sargodha after their worried families in the U.S. turned to the FBI to track them down. They were shifted over the weekend to Lahore, the provincial capital, for further questioning.

The five men are from the Washington, D.C. area, and the case has fanned fears that Americans and other Westerners — especially those of Pakistani descent — are traveling to Pakistan to join up with al-Qaida and other militant groups.

FBI agents, who have been granted some access to the men, are trying to see if there is enough evidence to charge any of them with conspiracy to provide material support to a terrorist group, an American official and another person familiar with the case said Friday.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the investigation.

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