Headley
Sentencing: US Double
Standards
Yohannan
Chemarapally
DAVID
Coleman Headley, one of the key conspirators in the
November 2008 Mumbai terror
attacks, was sentenced in the last week of January to
spend 35 years in prison.
He was found guilty on 12 counts by an US District Court
in Chicago.
The charges upheld against him
included a conspiracy to aid militants from the
Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) who had
physically carried out the Mumbai terror attacks in
November 2008. Headley
entered a guilty plea and cooperated with the US
authorities in order to escape the death sentence and
avoid extradition to India.
Headley
will be 82 years old when he will be eligible for
parole.
ACCOMPLICE
CLEARED
OF
MOST SERIOUS CHARGE
On
January 16, Tahhawur Rana, a Chicago
based businessman and once a friend of Headley, was also
sentenced to 14 years
in prison by the same Chicago Court.
The prosecutors had demanded a 30 year
prison term for Headley’s alleged accomplice. Rana, a
former Pakistan
army man who took Canadian citizenship,
was sentenced for providing materiel support for the
banned LeT and for
participating in an abortive plot against the Danish
newspaper in Copenhagen
that had
printed cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. Jurors had
cleared Rana of the most
serious charge of involvement in the 2008 Mumbai terror
attacks. They accepted
Rana’s plea that he was not aware of the conspiracy to
launch terror attacks on
Mumbai.
The
star prosecution witness against Rana was his erstwhile
friend, Headley. To
avoid the noose, Headley had spent five days on the
witness stand revealing
details about his contacts with the Inter Services
Intelligence (ISI) of Pakistan
and
the LeT. Headley, according to reports in the American
media, was also an
informer of long standing for the US Drug Enforcement
Agency (DEA). In exchange
for information, this agency had helped Headley to
escape a long jail sentence
in California
for drug dealing in the nineties. According to reports
in the American media,
Headley who at the time was known as Daood Saleem Gilani
was sent by the DEA to
infiltrate Pakistani terror groups having links with
drug gangs. Rana’s lawyers
had opposed Headley’s plea bargain, pointing out his
long term association with
intelligence agencies. The American intelligence
agencies had not bothered to
keep their counterparts in India
informed about the activities of Headley. India
and the US
actively cooperate in intelligence sharing on global
terror networks.
Relatives
of the 166 victims of the Mumbai attack as well as the
Indian government were
of the view that Headley deserved a death sentence or at
least incarceration
for the rest of his life. District Judge Harry
Leinenberger, while giving his
judgement indicated that he would have preferred the
maximum punishment to be
given to Headley. The judge pointed out that Headley had
previously received
two generous plea bargains when he was charged with
heroin trafficking in the
1980s and the 1990s. The judge noted that Headley has
escaped the death penalty
even as the lone survivor of the terrorist squad from Pakistan
was
hanged last year. Justice Leinenberger observed that the
Mumbai assault was so
unfathomable and terrifying “that perhaps the lucky ones
were those who did not
survive.” It was Headley’s meticulous reconnaissance
mission to Mumbai that
helped the 11 gunmen to inflict maximum damage on
hapless civilian populace. While
delivering his verdict, the judge also expressed the
hope that Headley would be
“under lock and key for the rest of his life.”
US
SAVES HEADLEY
FROM
REPATRIATION
It
was the prosecution that had asked Headley’s cooperation
in lieu of a lesser
sentence. “We need witnesses. The only way you get
witnesses in this world is
to threaten them with prosecution and then offer them an
incentive to cooperate,”
one of the prosecution lawyers had said. Headley’s
cooperation so far has not
resulted in the nabbing of either his handlers in Pakistan
or the ring leaders who
masterminded the Mumbai terror attacks. “The DEA says he
was deactivated as an
informant in early 2002 after he began training with the
Lashkar. Other US
agencies say
he remained a DEA informant in some capacity until at
least 2005. And Indian
officials claim that he remained a US
agent later than that,” according
to Sebastian Rotella of ProPublica, an American public
interest news network.
Rotella has extensively covered the Headley and Rana
trials.
The
US State Department spokesperson, Victoria Nuland, chose
to describe the
verdict on Headley as a “positive example” of India-US
counter-terrorism
cooperation. She insisted that the US
had kept its promise of “justice
being served” and went on to emphasise that Indian
investigators were allowed
to question Headley. Nuland, however, reiterated the
Obama administration’s
stand that Headley will not be sent to India
for further questioning and a
trial. Washington
claims that American laws do not permit repatriation of
condemned prisoners.
The
Indian government had said after the verdict was out
that it is still
continuing to press for the extradition of Headley. The
Indian external affairs
minister, Salman Khurshid, said that New Delhi
was “a little disappointed” with the verdict as “we
wanted him (Headley) to be
tried here in India.”
While assuring Washington
about his
government’s faith in the American judicial system, he
said that a trial in India
would
have ensured a “harsher punishment” for Headley.
Opposition parties have
demanded that the government take a tougher stand with
the Obama administration
and not give up on the demands for the repatriation of
Headley to face justice
on Indian soil. Repatriation, according legal experts,
is now out of question.
However,
under the terms of the “plea bargain,” Headley will be
available for
questioning by India’s
National Investigation Agency (NIA) in the presence of
officials from the US
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) if further
investigations are needed in
connection with the Mumbai terror attacks. The
FBI was no doubt aware about Headley’s clandestine
activities before and after
the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks. Headley was after all
a DEA agent of long
standing who had extensive contacts with the LeT and
its handlers.
Immediately after the Mumbai attacks, there were reports
in the Indian media
that US Intelligence had given prior warnings to their
Indian counterparts of
an impending sea-borne terror attack on the country’s
financial attack. Either
Headley or some other source from Pakistan
could have provided that information to the US
agencies.
US
UNILATERALISM:
A
COMMON PRACTICE
The
Indian government had originally insisted that Headley
had to face trial in an
Indian court as it was conclusively proven that he had
played a key role in the
2008 Mumbai terror attacks. An extradition treaty exists
between the two
countries and, given the close relations that exist
between the two countries
these days, the US
could
have dispatched Headley to face trial in India.
In Headley’s case, the
Indian government has not shown the kind of eagerness to
mete out justice as it
did in the case of Afzal Guru. Many legal luminaries
have argued that there was
more compelling evidence against Headley than against
Afzal Guru. The Indian
government did not legally oppose the “plea bargain” for
Headley that the US
law officials had put up before the Chicago court.
The
American government would not have tolerated a citizen
from a third country to
get away if a crime of similar magnitude was committed
on its soil. Forced
renditions of foreign citizens to the US,
even on the mere suspicion of being involved in
terrorist acts, has become a common
practice since Washington
started its global “war on terror.” Many of them still
languish in the
notorious Guantanamo
Bay
prison without trial.
Many of the people who were renditioned and tortured in
third countries by the US
government
were later found to be innocent.
While
people like Headley get a “fair trial” in American
courts, the Obama
administration metes out its own brand of justice to
others. Suspected
“terrorists,” some of them American citizens, are
subjected to targeted
killings in Pakistan,
Afghanistan,
Yemen
and Somalia.
More than 2300 people have been killed in Pakistan
alone. Now the
extra-judicial assassinations are spreading to other
parts of the world.
According to reports, the CIA is now planning to deploy
killer drones in
northwest Africa. The
Obama administration is
claiming that the host governments have given permission
for carrying out the
“lethal operations.” But the US
Justice Department stated that the government has the
right to act unilaterally
if any government is “unable or unwilling to suppress
the threat posed.” To
mollify critics, the Obama administration is now
thinking of setting up a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
Court,
created by the US Congress. Such a court would have to
justify “targeted
killings” of terror suspects to a federal judge.