http://www.thefrontierpost.com/News.aspx?ncat=ar&nid=791

Lahore murder mystery  Ali Sethi  On Tuesday afternoon, Ali Raza went to the
hospital. A 25-year-old constable in the Punjab police department, Ali Raza
was accompanying an old man who needed an M.R.I. scan. In the reception
area, he noticed that the waiting patients had abandoned their chairs and
were standing around the television. They had been watching the same images
all day: a dozen unidentified gunmen, two wearing backpacks, firing at a van
near the Liberty Market roundabout. The intended victims, the TV stations
had reported, were members of the Sri Lankan national cricket team, in town
here to play Pakistan. The dead: eight Pakistanis, including six of Ali
Raza's fellow police officers. "Everyone at the hospital was saying the same
thing," Ali Raza told me later that night, as we stood in line at a brightly
lighted stall selling paan - a mild stimulant made with betel nuts - near
the Main Market roundabout, just a short walk away from the site of the
attack. "They were saying that this was done to show the Indians that we in
Pakistan are also the victims of terrorism." "You think our own government
did it?" I asked. "No one else could get away with this kind of thing," he
insisted. He described the attackers' feat: they appeared out of nowhere at
one of the city's busiest intersections and fired for more than 20 minutes
at the van carrying the players to Qaddafi Stadium, and then fled in
rickshaws. "I know the kind of precautions we have to take when we are in a
VIP motorcade," the young officer told me. "And this was a 'VVIP' motorcade.
Every house in that neighbourhood was surrounded by the police. My friend
was there and he told me the attackers didn't receive a single wound." A
young man in a T-shirt who was standing next to us at the paan stall asked,
"Was your friend hurt?" Ali Raza said: "He is fine, by the grace of God."
This kind of talk was not limited to paan stalls. There had been all sorts
of opinions expressed on the privately owned TV channels, which now bring
live video and commentary from the sites of terrorist attacks to much of
Pakistan's urban population. The governor of Punjab Province, who last week
ousted the elected provincial government on the orders of President Asif Ali
Zardari, was on camera immediately after the attack, and compared it to the
terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India, last November. Others were more
specific: a member of the opposition Pakistan Muslim League said he "had no
doubt" that this was the work of the Indian intelligence agencies. A former
head of Pakistan's security service, the ISI, agreed with him. An analyst
from Islamabad, discussing the attack later in the day on a popular chat
show, said that "from every angle" it was evident that India, by attacking a
foreign cricket team in Pakistan, had gained. "Who benefits?" she said. "You
have to ask who benefits." Another guest on the show, an elderly sage in a
dark blue suit and a bright blue tie, wearing spectacles and speaking with
slow, slotting movements of his hand, said that the blaming of one country
by another was always counterproductive because, in the end, it took the
focus away from domestic troubles. He gave the example of Benazir Bhutto's
assassination, which had immediately led to conspiracy theories but was
still awaiting a proper inquiry. "When there is confusion," he said, "the
only people who benefit are the miscreants." A former intelligence official
I know had a different theory. He said he had seen a report some weeks ago
warning of exactly this kind of attack in Lahore, possibly against a cricket
team. He said it came from the rumour mill that "leads back to Waziristan"
in Pakistan's tribal areas. "So this is a security failure," he said. "But
it's not an intelligence failure." Later at night it was reported that the
government had found bags that held guns, hand grenades and almonds. This
was followed by the televised funeral of one of the slain policemen. His
female relatives were sitting around his corpse, wailing and beating their
chests. His father, surrounded by cameras, was looking at the floor and
saying that he was proud of his son for serving his country. Again at the
paan stall, now surrounded by listeners, I asked Ali Raza if he thought
there was a chance that the attack was the work of terrorists or criminals.
"There is a chance," he admitted. "But it could be the agencies. It could be
the government. It could be India also." I asked, "What about other people?"
"Which other people?" I said, "The people who kidnap journalists and bomb
the homes of politicians and slit the throats of government spies." He was
thinking about it. The man operating the paan stall was lining moistened
betel leaves with spices and condiments. He had on a tattered apron, which
is worn by men like him to keep the notoriously messy paan juice from
staining their clothes. He smiled at us and said, "Whoever has done this has
a lot of intelligence." He paused. As he did, I looked over the crowd, and
thought that for all our various theories, it was a point we could agree on.
And then he finished, "For poor people, everything is the same." Courtesy:
NY Times

-- 
Bobby Kunhu http://community.eldis.org/myshkin/Blog/

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