Brown color of Arjemandii prevents Oslo to get him freed from ISI?

Ehsan Arjmandi (left) with fellow Norwegian Zobair Shiekhzadeh, and scholar Waleed Garboni

Norway seems to have forgotten one of its sons simply because of the brown of the skin.

"The Norwegian government should use her political weight to free Ehsan (Arjemandi) like other such cases where the white Norwegians were involved," said Ali Arjemandi
"We feel we are being treated like second class Norwegians. . I hope I am wrong, but everything indicates so." Ali Arjemandi is elder brother of Ehsan Arjemandi who was abducted while on a visit to France-sized Balochistan.

Ehsan Arjemandi, was abducted from a bus at Zero Point, Balochistan, on August 7, 2009. The Pakistani intelligence service, the ISI, is believed to be responsible for the abduction. In July 2010, journalist Atta Ansari of Norway's NRK reported that Pakistan's Interior Minister Rehman Malik acknowledged Ehsan was in Pakistan's custody:

Ali Arjemandi, elder brother of Ehsan Arjemandi with veteran Baloch activist Jumma Khan in Ajman, UAE..

Former Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik, when he was in power, had confirmed to NRK that Ehsan Arjemandi is still in Pakistan. "I know well the case. He traveled around Pakistan with forged identity papers," said Interior Minister Rehman Malik in an exclusive interview with NRK. "We arrested him and he is still in our custody."

Despite the admission of the highest security official that Arjemandi was in the custody of Pakistan without any trial, Oslo's failure to get him freed showed the country's la ck of political will to secure the welfare of colored folks and inherent white racism in Norwegian society.

Yes... two guys both white were convicted of murder in Congo. Then one of them Joshua French  killed the other guy Tjostolv Moland , but Norway worked day and night for for him and he was brought to Norway." He said in another case a Norwegian journalist was abducted in Kabul and Oslo set up three teams and managed to get him freed, but Arjemandi is being treated as if he is a child of a lesser God just because he is brown.

Arjemandi's mother Mahtab, 80, is now very sick with cancer and is in hospital in Zahedan in Iran.

"In fact I wrote a letter to the king for audience, which was denied," Ali Arjemandi said.

According to Chris Gay, managing director of the NY-based Engage Africa Now, the most vulnerable section of the population is mostly targeted by the state and other non-state actors. In Pakistan, Baloch are most vulenrable

Racism is a big problem in Norway and even the main media Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK), Norway’s biggest media group. is accused of promoting racism.

Bibi Mahtab, 80, who is sick with cancer in Zahedan.


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