Egan had been blunt. If this case was going to be resolved anytime
soon, he told Dokur and her entourage, it was going to have to be done
through administrative means. The courts were too risky. Appeals,
delays and complex legal motions citing arcane passages in Islamic law
books could easily turn the whole matter into a decade-long waiting
game.
No, if this was going to be done, it had to be done politically.
And it had to be done carefully. The King of Jordan may have been
powerful, as leaders go, but he still had to deal with deep fissures
in his government, and it would have at the very least been reckless for
him to confront Gen. Abequa head on.
Egan advised Dokur to be patient. Wheels had to be set in motion.
And in the Middle East, wheels turn slowly.
But patience was a virtue that Dokur was finding hard to master.
Along with her slain sister’s strength, Dokur had also apparently
been infused with her fierce devotion to the children. It galled Dokur
to think of the children, “Sesame Street Kids,” her daughter had
called them, living like prisoners in a run-down apartment on a
desolate dirt road in Sweileh.
American officials -- Clora the consul among them -- had
visited the children there. They found that, despite Gen. Abequa’s
lofty status, the children were living under “virtual house
arrest in an almost intolerable … flat,” Sen. Lautenberg would
later say. The apartment lacked air conditioning, despite temperatures
up to 110 degrees. It was infested with bugs and rats. The children
spoke little, an indication, Dokur would later say, that “maybe
everything’s not perfect there.”
But there was little that Dokur could do. The next move belonged to
the Jordanian government.
It was to be a dramatic move.
Mohammed Ishamil Abequa had been held without bail in a Jordanian
jail almost since his return to his native country. He had confessed
to the slaying, but he had not formally been charged with murder or
kidnapping.
Prosecutors in Amman told reporters that they intended to proceed
cautiously with the case. But on Aug. 4, 1994, the government
announced that it had secretly indicted Abequa several days earlier,
charging him with murdering his wife and kidnapping his children.
There were three counts in all and each count carried a maximum
three-year penalty. News of the indictment was splashed across the
front page of Amman’s daily newspapers. Privately, prosecutors
in Amman acknowledged that the indictment was a calculated move
designed to help the dead woman's sister win custody of her niece and
nephew.
For days Dokur and Feinberg and the other members of their team had
been sitting in their Amman hotel room trying to read political tea
leaves to see what their next move should be. The indictment hit both
families like a lightening bolt, and Feinberg and Dokur huddled
together to interpret it. "The fact that he has been charged with
kidnapping is very significant," Feinberg told Dokur. "It
sends the message that this is a special case, and it also puts his
family in a difficult light because they are then holding kidnapped
children." It also provided Dokur with an extra measure of
security in case the political efforts to free the children failed and
the case wound up before a religious court.
"I think it will have an impact on the court, depending on how
involved the hearing gets," Feinberg mused "If
it rises to a level of questions of the welfare of the Abequa
children, I think the fact that their father is charged with murder
and bringing them here illegally will have an obvious impact."
Feinberg and Dokur were not alone in interpreting the charges as a
signal that the government was quietly trying to expedite
Dokur’s quest to be reunited with the children. Abequa’s family
said they saw it as a direct challenge from the Jordanian government
to their claim. The charges, the family said, were only the latest
example of the government’s efforts to discredit them.
Ahmed Abequa, the accused killer's brother, complained in an interview
on the day the charges were announced, that the government had been
using the Jordanian press to discredit Mohammed Abequa and boost
Dokur's case.
"Nobody puts anybody's name in the newspaper who is accused of
a capital crime in Jordan," Ahmed Abequa said. "But in
this case, the name is constantly printed in big black letters in the
newspapers." He said coverage in the local press depicted Dokur
sympathetically. "This is a tragedy for two families," he
said. "And it has become an international tragedy."
The charges against his brother and the claimed manipulation of the
press was all part of a government conspiracy, he said. The government
was about to cave in to American pressure and remove the two children
from the Abequa home, he fumed. "We have many friends in
the capital. But we have friends as well who are also our
enemies," Ahmed Abequa said.
|