Hard to cry over Muslims murdering Muslims…it’s an Islamic thing.

B


 


 
<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/leading-journalist-murdered-by-pakistani-security-service-2291604.html>
 
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/leading-journalist-murdered-by-pakistani-security-service-2291604.html


Leading journalist 'murdered by Pakistani security service'


Saleem Shahzad had warned that the authorities might act against him and 
revealed a previous threat

By Andrew Buncombe, Asia Correspondent

Wednesday, 1 June 2011

 

A surge of outrage and grief jolted Pakistan last night after the discovery of 
the body of a journalist who had highlighted alleged links between al-Qa’ida 
and the country’s military, two days after he went missing in Islamabad. It 
appears he had been tortured and beaten before being killed and his body 
dumped. 

 

Human rights campaigners, who have highlighted Pakistan as one of the most 
dangerous places for journalists to work, said they believed Syed Saleem 
Shahzad, the 40-year-old correspondent for Asia Times Online, had been abducted 
by the intelligence services after the publication of an article about a recent 
militant attack on a naval base. Mr Shahzad, who had previously been questioned 
by the InterServices Intelligence (ISI) agency, had warned the authorities 
might act against him and had even revealed a previous threat. 

In an email to Ali Dayan Hasan of Human Rights Watch (HRW) last October, Mr 
Shahzad had forwarded details of a meeting when he had questioned by senior ISI 
officials over a an earlier controversial article. He had written: “Dear Hasan, 
I am forwarding this email to you for your record only if in case something 
happens to me or my family in future.” 

The affable Mr Shahzad, who was married with three young children, went missing 
on Sunday evening after leaving his home in Islamabad to take part in a 
television news show where he was to discuss his latest report. He never 
arrived at the studios. His family contacted HRW the following day and Mr Hasan 
said that, through interlocutors, they learned he was being held by the ISI. 
They understood Mr Shahzad would be released by Monday evening. 

But yesterday afternoon, reports emerged that Mr Shahzad’s car and identity 
card had been discovered near the town of Mandi Bahauddin, around 100 miles 
south of Islamabad. Soon after it was revealed local people had also found the 
journalist’s body, lying on the bank of a canal. Local reports said he had been 
shot. It is unclear how long the body had been there. A friend of Mr Shahzad 
who went to try and collect the body from the police station told The 
Independent it appeared he had been tortured and television images of the 
journalist also showed the journalist’s bruised face. “It’s very bad. His face 
was hit very badly,” said the friend. 

The disappearance of Mr Shahzad, who also worked for the Italian news agency 
Adnkronos International, came just two days after the publication of his final 
article. In it, he had written that al-Qa’ida militants had infiltrated the 
naval forces at the Mehran naval air station in Karachi, which was attacked and 
besieged on May 22 in a confrontation that lasted more than 16 hours. It said 
the attack had been carried out after talks between the militants and the navy 
broke down. This week, it emerged Pakistani authorities had arrested a former 
naval commando, Kamran Ahmed Malik, and were questioning him over the attack 
and his alleged links to militants. 

Mr Shahzad was known to have sources both within the Pakistan’s intelligence 
community and among Taliban and al-Qa’ida militants and had on one occasion 
interviewed militant leader Ilyas Kashmiri. Last October, the journalist had 
been called for a meeting at ISI headquarters after he had written an article 
that claimed the Pakistani authorities had released from custody Afghan Taliban 
military commander Mullah Baradar to negotiate with the Pakistan army. 

Mr Shahzad said the mood at the meeting, at which he was asked for but declined 
to reveal the sources for his article, was polite but that at the end one of 
the senior officers had said to him: “I must give you a favour. We have 
recently arrested a terrorist and have recovered a lot of data, dairies and 
other material during the interrogation. The terrorist had a hit list with him. 
If I find your name in the list, I will certainly let you know.” 

Mr Hasan said the journalist had taken the final words as a threat. 

“He told me he was being followed and that he is getting threatening telephone 
calls and that he is under intelligence surveillance,” Mr Hasan told Reuters. 
“We can’t say for sure who has killed Saleem Shahzad. But what we can say for 
sure is that Saleem Shahzad was under serious threat from the ISI and [we have] 
every reason to believe that that threat was credible.” 

One of the ISI’s media wing officials who attended the meeting and questioned 
Mr Shahzad was Rear Admiral Adnan Nazir, a naval officer. 

When contacted last night, he declined to comment on either the meeting or the 
death of Mr Shahzad, saying: “I don’t speak to anyone.” 

The killing highlights the perilous working conditions for journalists in 
Pakistan. The Committee to Protect Journalists said 11 media workers were 
killed in Pakistan in 2010 and that at least five had died already this year. 
As it was, the discovery of the journalist’s body happened on the day that 
friends and relatives of Salmaan Taseer, the assassinated governor of Punjab 
province, were marking what would have been his 67th birthday. 

The journalist and analyst Ayesha Tammy Haq, who is a sister-in-law of Mr 
Taseer, said: “We were at the graveyard when confirmation of Saleem Shahzad’s 
death came. People were horrified and angry. Salmaan was murdered for speaking 
out. Saleem Shahzad was murdered for speaking out, for exposing terrors roots. 
Everyone at the graveyard and every thinking person in this country is saying 
enough. No more silence. No more giving in to fear.” 

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani yesterday expressed his condolences 
and ordered an inquiry into the journalist's death, though which organisation 
would be capable of such an investigation is unclear. 

“Pakistan’s intelligence agencies face serious allegations that they been 
involved the numerous killings of activists, lawyers and journalists,” said Sam 
Zarifi, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific director. “Early indications from 
this case suggest an alarming expansion of the ‘kill and dump’ operations 
previously seen mostly in the Balochistan province. The Pakistan authorities 
must hold those responsible to account and protect journalists targeted merely 
for doing their jobs.” 

Mr Shahzad, who was originally from Karachi and had worked for a number of 
media organisations, had also completed a newly-released book, ‘Inside Al - 
Qaeda: Beyond Bin Laden and 9/11’, that was published by Pluto books. Publisher 
Jon Wheatley said in a statement: “It is my sad duty to announce that Pluto 
author and international journalist Syed Saleem Shahzad, has been found dead in 
suspicious circumstances, two days after he went missing and three days after 
writing an article on possible complicity between al-Qa’ida and elements of the 
Pakistani navy.” 

Extract: How Saleem Shahzad targeted al-Qa'ida 

Al-Qa'ida carried out the brazen attack on PNS Mehran naval air station in 
Karachi on May 22 after talks failed between the navy and al-Qa'ida over the 
release of naval officials arrested on suspicion of al-Qa'ida links, an Asia 
Times Online investigation reveals. 

Pakistani security forces battled for 15 hours to clear the naval base after it 
had been stormed by a handful of well-armed militants. At least 10 people were 
killed... before some of the attackers escaped through a cordon of thousands of 
armed forces. 

An official statement placed the number of militants at six, with four killed 
and two escaping. Unofficial sources, though, claim there were 10 militants 
with six getting free. Asia Times Online contacts confirm that the attackers 
were from Ilyas Kashmiri's 313 Brigade, the operational arm of al-Qa'ida. Three 
attacks on navy buses in which at least nine people were killed last month were 
warning shots for navy officials to accept al-Qa'ida's demands over the 
detained suspects. 

The May 2 killing in Pakistan of Osama bin Laden spurred al-Qa'ida groups into 
developing a consensus for the attack in Karachi, in part as revenge for the 
death of their leader... The deeper underlying motive, though, was a reaction 
to massive internal crackdowns on al-Qa'ida affiliates within the navy." 

By Syed Saleem Shahzad. Published on the Asia Time Online on 27 May 

------------------------------------
See also:


Pakistan’s spy agencies are suspected of ties to reporter’s death
 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia-pacific/pakistans-spy-agencies-are-suspected-of-ties-to-reporters-death/2011/05/31/AGhrMhFH_story_1.html>
 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia-pacific/pakistans-spy-agencies-are-suspected-of-ties-to-reporters-death/2011/05/31/AGhrMhFH_story_1.html


Dead Pakistani Writer Claimed Military, Militant Tie
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-05-31/pakistani-journalist-found-dead-after-disappearing-from-capital.html

 



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