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Haneef wants Australia to apologise, wants to return

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Haneef wants Australia to apologise, wants to return
Monday, July 30, 2007
21:28 IST

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Bangalore: Back home after a 27-day ordeal, Mohammed Haneef on Monday said he wants Australia to apologise to India for his detention on terror charges and vowed to return there and fight to get his work visa back.


The Bangalore doctor, who returned here yesterday after Australian police dropped terror charges against him, told a crowded press conference about the ordeal he and his family went through and the overwhelming support he received.


"I don't expect an apology from the Australian government or the authorities but I would appreciate if they apologise to my peace-loving country and citizens," said the 27-year-old doctor.


Haneef was not forthcoming on whether he would sue the Australian government, but asserted that he would like to return to work as a doctor there and was willing to fight to get his visa back.


"I would like to return. I want the visa back. I will fight for that," he said. "I have not sought any legal advice on this at this time. That will be later on," he said on whether he would sue the Australian authorities.


Asked whether he was victimised because he was an Asian Muslim, Haneef said, "there might be an element of truth in it...I suspect." Haneef profusely thanked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, his cabinet colleagues Pranab Mukherjee, E Ahamed, Karnataka Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy and the Indian Ambassador in Australia Prabhat Shukla for supporting him.


"I am not a victim of international conspiracy, but Australian conspiracy," Haneef said, adding he does not wish to see anybody victimised in the name of terrorism. "My family suffered a great deal as a result of what happened to me," he said.




The medico said he was saddened by the fact that Australia had not reinstated his work visa which would have enabled him to return as a doctor in the Gold Coast hospital in Brisbane.

"I enjoyed working as a doctor at Gold Coast hospital," he said.


He said he had no idea why his work visa was revoked by Australian Immigration Minister Kevin Andrews. "I would like him to come forward and let out the facts," he added.


Haneef's lawyer Peter Russo, who waged a successful battle to free him, said the Australian Federal Police had taken every item of the doctor's personal belongings when they arrested him on July two from Brisbane airport.


"If this does not make a person feel like a victim of some sort, then what would," Russo asked.


Haneef expressed happiness at rejoining his family but said "I would like to return to Australia. I want my visa back and I will fight for it." "I am overwhelmed with the support here and in Australia," he said.


Russo said "we believe there is a strong case that his visa would be restored and we will be successful in this. We need to restore his reputation".


Asked whether Australian television network Channel 9 had struck a deal with Haneef for airing his first interview after release, the doctor's wife's cousin Imran Siddiqui evaded a direct reply and merely said the family wanted to thank the Australian people and "managed to give the interview." He said the parents of his cousins Sabeel and Kafeel need emotional support at this time and it was not their fault that such things happened.


About accepting any job in the country, he said he has kept all his options open. "Now, I want to spend some time with my family." Of his days in an Australian jail, Haneef said, "I think it was just a reminder of the final day, the day when you are dead and in the graveyard."
 
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I am glad that he is back, and he is right...the aussie's have to apologize.
 
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Well there is another view going around. Its the Australian public/media and system that saved him. There were protests against his detention by Australians themselves.
 
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Hmmm I wonder why the PM refused to apologize to him today?

A simple gesture...
 
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Co-lateral damage.... you see it happens all the time..;)
 
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Co-lateral damage.... you see it happens all the time..;)
Ye .. Better safe than sorry .. You can sympathize with Haneef as much as you want, but you'd want your Govt. to do the same if an attack happened on yours.
 
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I am glad that he is back, and he is right...the aussie's have to apologize.
For trying to keep themselves safe? I doubt it. India would have done the same, so would Pakistan.

Obviously many are getting swept away by the leftist campaign that followed Haneef.
 
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"Suspects" have to be sometimes be kept in protective custody, for a Nation's own good, especially when terrorism is in the air.

He was not beaten, water-boarded, or starved. They released him when he was found out he was innocent. The investigation process had to be completed. What would the apology be for?

"we simply followed through?"

What will it really accomplish? he is home safe isn't he? and basking in media glare... I might add.
 
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Well there is another view going around. Its the Australian public/media and system that saved him. There were protests against his detention by Australians themselves.

Again, goes to show the system worked!!
 
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I don't know about the Leftists but the Australians can be told a thing or two anytime!

Pardon the use of my words but they always happen to take things a tad bit far than their white cousins. Be it the case of our nuclear test, uranium supplies or whatever. They can be told a thing or two. I don't mind.
 
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Howard thinks he can outBush Bush in the War on Terror!

With his two and a ha'penny contribution to the WoT, he thinks he is the largest contributor and makes it a point to be more loyal to the King than the King himself.

Unlike Howard, the Australian public has rallied to highlight the miscarriage of investigation and the Queensland PM has stated that Haneef's job is protected!
 
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I don't know about the Leftists but the Australians can be told a thing or two anytime!

Pardon the use of my words but they always happen to take things a tad bit far than their white cousins. Be it the case of our nuclear test, uranium supplies or whatever. They can be told a thing or two. I don't mind.

Told a thing or two about what? That they should not conduct a police investigation in their own country? Would India have done any different given it is a victim of the same kind of terrorism ( since 1989)?

Are you now saying this is a racist thing now?

If so,how so? Please substantiate your stance rather than emotion. I would love to hear your point of view on this one.
 
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Are you now saying this is a racist thing now?

Not at all. I'm just saying I don't mind them Australians being subject to a little criticism. I think Salim has put it in words more effectively than I did. I'm not saying anything against the Australian public but their government gets only my contempt for their past behavior towards India.
 
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Not at all. I'm just saying I don't mind them Australians being subject to a little criticism. I think Salim has put it in words more effectively than I did. I'm not saying anything against the Australian public but their government gets only my contempt for their past behavior towards India.

If you are refering to the nuke thing, it true - a lot of countries were PO-ed @India at the time, right or wrong.
 
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Would India have done any different given it is a victim of the same kind of terrorism ( since 1989)?

Sri,

I wonder if Indians should treat the West and their Australian little brothers in the same manner they treated us when we were suffering at the hands of Islamic fundamentalism manifest in its fullest glory from Kashmir to Mumbai and from Assam to Chennai!

I see no need for Indians to rush in support of Aussies or the Brits. We are better off keeping quiet for a while.
 
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