Police officer accused of killing 400 plus in fake encounters released

The Judge of Anti-Terrorism Court in Karachi on Saturday signed release orders of Rao Ahmed Khan, a police officer popularly known as Rao Anwar. (AP/file photo)
Updated 21 July 2018
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Police officer accused of killing 400 plus in fake encounters released

  • Rao Anwar, a police chief in district Malir of Karachi, was arrested for killing an aspiring model, Naqeeb Mehsud, in a fake encounter on Jan. 13, 2018
  • The suspended police officer was granted bail in murder case and for possessing illegal weapons on July 10 and 20, respectively

KARACHI: The Judge of Anti-Terrorism Court in Karachi on Saturday signed release orders of Rao Ahmed Khan, a police officer popularly known as Rao Anwar, after which jail police were removed of his residence being declared as sub-jail earlier in May.

Anwar, under whom more than 400 people are believed to have been killed in fake encounters, was granted bail in two cases lodged against him in Sachal Police station of the Pakistani metropolis, including the murder of Naqeeb Mehsud, an aspiring model, who was killed in a fake encounter on Jan. 13 this year.
The Mehsud family has been boycotting proceeding after they filed a petition for change of judge in Sindh high court following his bail in a fake encounter case on July 10. “We don’t have trust in the judge after she granted bail,” Muhammad Khan, father of Naqeeb Mehsud, told Arab News in a previous interview.
Amid the boycott, Anwar got second bail in Sindh Arms Act 2013 and Explosive Substance Act on Friday, July 20, 2018.
In April, a joint investigation team’s report, a copy of which was made available to Arab News, had declared Rao Anwar the prime suspect in this case. 




Copy of release order of Rao Anwar, who was granted bails in Naqeeb Mehsud murder and illegal arms case on July 10 and 20, respectively.


“The statement of former SSP Rao Anwar and witnesses recorded under Section 161 of the Pakistan Penal Code, location of Call Detail Record (CDR), CDs of interviews of Rao Anwar with media and investigation till this day prove that Rao Anwar is central character and leader of the team which picked up Naqeebullah, Mohammed Ishaq, Mohammed Sabir and Nazar Jan, declared them terrorists and then killed them in a fake police encounter,” reads the report.
“In light of this evidence, former SSP Rao Anwar and the absconding policemen are found guilty,” reads the JIT report.
The JIT report had rejected claims by Rao Anwar that he did not appear before the JIT which he considers biased. “The JIT held several meetings on the given dates and places and interrogated former SSP Raj Anwar Ahmed Khan on two occasions.”
According to the report, the JIT members also took Anwar to the spot of the encounter at 17:50 on March 31, 2018. “The JIT held several meetings and in a few of these, former SSP Rao Anwar Ahmed was interrogated, after which the report was compiled. Rao was asked to present proofs in his defense, which he failed to produce.” 




Copy of release order of Rao Anwar, who was granted bails in Naqeeb Mehsud murder and illegal arms case on July 10 and 20, respectively.


Anwar alleged that the slain Pashtun model was an active member of banned terrorist groups such as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Al-Qaeda, and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ). However, the evidence subsequently began to pile up against the police team involved in the killing.
As pressure mounted on Anwar, he decided to go underground and made a botched attempt to fly out of Pakistan. However, he, in a surprise move in March, came to the court which handed him over to the Sindh police.
Anwar’s lawyer told the chief justice that his client had “surrendered” and wanted protective bail. However, the Supreme Court turned down the request and ordered the law enforcement authorities to jail him. Anwar, however, later got his plea for declaration of his house as sub-jail approved.


UN says ‘deeply troubled’ by Kenya protest killings

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UN says ‘deeply troubled’ by Kenya protest killings

GENEVA: The United Nations on Tuesday expressed serious concern over the deaths of at least 10 people in Kenya where police and protesters clashed during anti-government demonstrations the previous day.
The violence erupted on Saba Saba Day (meaning Seven Seven) when demonstrators annually mark the events of July 7, 1990 when Kenyans rose up to demand a return to multi-party democracy after years of autocratic rule by then-president Daniel arap Moi.
“We are deeply troubled by the killings yesterday of at least 10 people, as well as looting and destruction of property in Kenya,” UN rights office spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani told reporters in Geneva.
She said that “lethal ammunition, rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons were used” as police responded to the protests.
She highlighted that Kenyan police had reported that at least 11 people were killed, 52 police officers injured and 567 arrests made.
The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights meanwhile reported at least 10 deaths, 29 injuries, 37 arrests and two abductions, she added.
“We have also received reports of looting and damage to public and private property by unidentified individuals in multiple locations.”
Shamdasani said the violence came “barely two weeks after 15 protesters were reportedly killed and many more injured in Nairobi and other parts of Kenya on 25 June.”
UN rights chief Volker Turk renews “his call for calm and restrain, and full respect for the freedoms of expression, association and peaceful assembly,” she said.
“It is essential that legitimate grievances at the root of these protests are addressed,” the spokeswoman said.
The UN rights office noted that Kenyan police had announced an investigation into earlier incidents.
Shamdasani stressed that “under international human rights law, intentional lethal force by law enforcement officers, including with firearms, should only be used when strictly necessary to protect life from an imminent threat.”
Turk reiterates “his call for all reported killings and other alleged violations and abuses of international human rights law, including with respect to use of force, to be promptly, thoroughly, independently and transparently investigated,” she said.
“Those responsible must be held to account.”

Acropolis shuts, outdoor work halted as heatwave scorches Greece

Updated 2 min 10 sec ago
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Acropolis shuts, outdoor work halted as heatwave scorches Greece

ATHENS: Greece’s top archaeological monument, the Acropolis, was partially shut Tuesday as part of emergency measures to protect visitors and workers around the country during a four-day heatwave.
The Greek culture ministry said the world-renowned site would be shut till 5:00 p.m. (1400 GMT) “for the safety of workers and visitors, owing to high temperatures.”
The four-day heatwave confirmed by meteorologists began Sunday is the second to grip Greece since late June.
Temperatures are expected to reach 42 Celsius (107.6 Fahrenheit) on Tuesday, with a maximum of 38 Celsius in Athens.
Similar temperatures are expected on Wednesday.
To protect outdoor workers, the labor ministry has decreed a work stoppage from 12:00 to 5:00 p.m. in various parts of the country, including several islands.
The stoppage mainly affects construction work and delivery riders.
“Days with a heatwave make my job more difficult,” cycle-riding courier Michalis Keskinidis told AFP.
“We drink a lot of water to protect ourselves from the heat, combined with electrolytes, and take breaks whenever possible,” the 43-year-old said.
The 2,500-year-old Acropolis, built on a rock overlooking the capital that offers little shade, draws tens of thousands of visitors daily.
Last year it recorded some 4.5 million visitors, an increase of over 15 percent compared to 2023.
Officials had been forced to order similar shutdowns in the past two years in heatwave conditions.

The Greek civil protection authority has warned of high fire risk in the greater Athens area, in central Greece and the Peloponnese peninsula.
Greece’s fire department has been dealing with up to 50 fires daily, the head of the Greek fire service officers’ union Constantinos Tsigkas told state TV ERT.
Elsewhere, Serbia’s hydrometeorological service RMHZ warned that weather conditions could fuel more fires, after 620 fires were recorded Monday.
But there are also thunderstorms expected in Serbia’s northern Vojvodina region, as well as in western and central areas.
RHMZ has also warned of the possibility of hail and hurricane-force gusts of wind.
Croatia has already felt the impact of storms since Monday, with several of the country’s regions affected.
Two people were injured and hospitalized in Vinkovci after a storm knocked down a power line on a family house near the eastern town, police said.
The authorities said they had taken dozens of calls over wind-related emergencies including trees blocking roads, damaged roofs and power failures.
On Tuesday, heavy rain and gale-force winds flooded roads, knocked down trees and caused power outages at the Croatian port town of Split, the state-run HRT broadcaster reported.
At the town’s port, a ferry broke its moorings and hit a catamaran and a tourist excursion boat, sinking the latter.
There was similar trouble further north, with storms raging in Hungary and Slovakia.
In Budapest, strong winds damaged roofs, felled trees onto roads and downed power lines on Monday, with the national meteorological service HungaroMet measuring winds up to 137 kilometers (85 miles) per hour locally.
Rail traffic was severely disrupted across Hungary with full restoration of services potentially requiring weeks, according to Construction and Transport Minister Janos Lazar.
In Slovakia, gale-force winds caused power outages and blew off the roof of a block of flats in the eastern town of Gelnica and fallen trees disrupted road and railway transport across the region.
The country’s weather service SHMU has issued a storm warning with heavy rain, wind and hail for Tuesday, mainly for central and eastern Slovakia.

Thousands told to stay home as Spain forest fire rages on

Updated 37 sec ago
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Thousands told to stay home as Spain forest fire rages on

  • Forest fire stoked by fierce winds has burned more than 2,300 hectares
  • Spain has in recent days sweltered through a heatwave that parched the land and heightened the risk of forest fires

MADRID: Spanish firefighters on Tuesday were battling a forest fire stoked by fierce winds that has burned more than 2,300 hectares (5,680 acres), with authorities urging thousands of residents to stay home.

The Spanish army’s emergency response unit said it had deployed overnight near the northeastern city of Tarragona to assist local authorities.

The blaze has devoured “around 2,377 hectares of land, mostly forest,” countryside rangers in the Catalonia region wrote on X.

The protected Els Ports natural park makes up 30 percent of the affected area, they added.

Firefighters released video footage shot from a helicopter on Monday showing hills enveloped in a cloud of grey and orange smoke stretching into the distance.

Winds of up to 90 kilometers per hour (56 miles per hour) made it harder to extinguish the fire overnight, firefighters said.

The national civil protection authority urged residents in the area to close their doors and windows and stay home, saying that around 18,000 people were affected.

Scientists say human-induced climate change is increasing the intensity, length and frequency of the extreme heat that causes some forest fires.

Spain has in recent days sweltered through a heatwave that parched the land and heightened the risk of forest fires.

National weather agency AEMET said last month was Spain’s hottest June on record and that the frequency of extreme heat had tripled in the past 10 years.

According to the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS), some 500 fires destroyed 300,000 hectares in Spain in 2022, a record for the continent.

Around 21,000 hectares have burned so far this year.


Kremlin says former minister’s suicide is shocking

Updated 9 sec ago
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Kremlin says former minister’s suicide is shocking

MOSCOW: The Kremlin said on Tuesday that the suicide of former Transport Minister Roman Starovoit just hours after his dismissal by President Vladimir Putin was shocking.

Starovoit was found dead in his car outside Moscow with a gunshot wound and the principal hypothesis is that he took his own life, state investigators said on Monday, hours after Putin fired him.

A presidential decree published on Monday gave no reason for the dismissal of Starovoit after barely a year in the job.


Philippines summons Chinese envoy over sanctions against former senator

Updated 46 min 42 sec ago
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Philippines summons Chinese envoy over sanctions against former senator

  • Francisco Tolentino was banned from mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau over ‘egregious conduct’ detrimental to relations between Manila and Beijing
  • He lost his bid for a second term in the Philippines’ midterm elections in May

MANILA: The Philippines’ foreign ministry has summoned China’s ambassador to Manila over Beijing’s imposition of sanctions against former senator Francis Tolentino, the president’s office said on Tuesday.

Tolentino, who lost his bid for a second term in the Philippines’ midterm elections in May, was banned from mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau over “egregious conduct” detrimental to relations between Manila and Beijing.

Tolentino helped in approving laws last year that defined the country’s sea lanes and maritime zones, which China opposed. He also accused the Chinese embassy of contracting a firm that maintains troll farms to sow disinformation.

“The imposition of punitive measures ... is inconsistent with the norms of mutual respect and dialogue that underpin relations between two equal sovereign states,” presidential press officer Claire Castro told a briefing.

Manila’s foreign ministry said it summoned Chinese ambassador Huang Xilian on Friday. China’s embassy in Manila said in a statement the ambassador notified the Philippines’ foreign ministry of China’s decision to impose sanctions on Tolentino.

“It should be noted that such sanctions fall purely within China’s legal prerogative, and there are consequences for hurting China’s interests,” the embassy said.

The Chinese foreign ministry has previously accused some Filipino politicians of making “malicious remarks and moves” that hurt ties between the two nations.

Relations between China and the Philippines have soured under President Ferdinand Marcos over a longstanding dispute in the South China Sea.

In 2016, an international tribunal ruled Beijing’s sweeping claims to the waterway had no basis in international law. China has rejected the decision. Several other countries in Southeast Asia also claim parts of the South China Sea.