A month on, Sahiwal tragedy continues to haunt family members

Muhammad Jalil, left with his father Muhammad Bashir. (AN photo)
Updated 16 February 2019
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A month on, Sahiwal tragedy continues to haunt family members

  • Conflicting statements from officials deter case from making any headway
  • JIT to submit it's final report on February 19
LAHORE: First, they shot at the car’s tyres. As one tyre burst, the small Suzuki Alto swerved sharply to the right before spinning fast and finally coming to a halt.
 
Within minutes, armed gunmen in balaclavas emerged from two police vehicles. They pointed their guns at the driver and pulled the trigger for a second time.
 
When the firing stopped, one of the uniformed men dialed a number on his mobile and spoke briefly to someone on the other line even as Khalil, who was sitting in the passenger seat of the Alto, pleaded for mercy. "Let my family live. Take anything you want,” he told the men, holding on tightly to his four-year-old daughter. But as soon as the call ended, there was another round of gunfire.
 
Khalil, his wife, and their 13-year-old daughter died immediately, while their three surviving children -- Umair, 10, Hadia, 7, and Muniba, 4 -- were yanked out of the car before it was sprayed with bullets for the fourth and final time.
 
A stranger spotted the screaming and bleeding children and drove them to a petrol station in the nearby city of Sahiwal, in Punjab. A bullet had grazed Umair’s leg and his four-year-old sister’s hand.
 
An hour later, Khalil’s brother, Muhammad Jalil, received a phone call from Rescue 1122 -- an ambulance service station. They told him to pick up three minor children and four dead bodies from a civil hospital in Sahiwal.
 
“Our neighbors saw the morning news and quickly called us,” Jalil said, adding that "if they hadn’t told us, we would have continued to search for my brother and his family."

This was on the morning of January 19 and the men who were behind the killings -- which took place on a busy thoroughfare outside of Lahore -- turned out to be counter-terrorism officials.

In a written statement to a Joint Investigation Team (JIT) who were tasked with probing the incident, Umair said that the men had abandoned him and his two sisters in the middle of the road, before speeding away.
 
The three children survived only because their parents had used their own bodies to shield them from the gunfire.
 
In a statement released to the press on the same day, Punjab’s Counter Terrorism Department (CTD), a specialized unit of the police, said that it was involved in an “intelligence-based operation” that had resulted in a shootout with “terrorists.”
 
The police report, a copy of which is available with Arab News, states that terrorists were travelling from Lahore to Sahiwal using a family as their cover. The family which was inside the car, it added, was shot at by terrorists travelling on a motorcycle, who fled the scene soon after.
 
However, a video, recorded by a passerby on his cell phone, shows that it was the men in uniform who had been firing at the time. It doesn't show any other motorcycle or an exchange of fire taking place.
In the course of the next few days, the the story's narrative had changed with officials now saying that Zeeshan, the driver, was a terrorist associated with Daesh.
 
Punjab’s Law Minister Muhammad Basharat Raja, who had shared the details, added that he “was carrying explosives, hand grenades and weapons.” Except, another video, captured by an eyewitness, rebuffed the provincial minister's claims. 
 
It shows CTD officers pulling out suitcases -- which Khalil’s family was traveling with -- instead of explosives from the car’s trunk. Yet, the law minister insisted that the operation was “100 percent correct." As for Khalil and his family, they were simply “collateral damage.” The car had tinted windows and the officers could not see inside, Raja said.
 
However, if 10-year-old Umair is to be believed, the officers had a clear view of the car and its occupants in between firings.
 
Now, the law minister said his statement about the operation being “100 percent correct” was misunderstood. Speaking to Arab News, he explained: “The final decision will be made after the JIT report comes. What I said was that it was an intelligence-based operation. The intelligence reports were that there were terrorists in the car. But, it is unfortunate, we have found leads on only one person in the car. The others have no link to terrorists, as per the evidence so far.”
 
Other loopholes have since surfaced in the case as well. The first handwritten police report mentions 16 CTD men who conducted the operation, while only six been arrested till date.
 
When Khalil’s family asked for an attested copy of the police’s First Information Report (FIR) -- to file a petition in the court -- government officials gave them three separate ones, each different from the other and with a different vehicle registration number of the car which the family was traveling in.
 
“The entire incident could be a case of mistaken identity,” Ehtesham Amir-ud-din, the family’s lawyer told Arab News. “In the first FIR, the car they were chasing had the number LER-6663. But they fired at a car with the number plate LEA-6683.” Officials told him it was merely a typing error.
 
When conflicting details of the Sahiwal incident emerged, it triggered a public outcry, with several seeing its as a staged extrajudicial killing which the police in Pakistan are sometimes accused of.
 
For now, the newly-elected government has formed a JIT for a thorough probe. However, Jalil said that it is an exercise in futility as it comprises senior officials from the police and intelligence agencies.
 
“The same force, whose officers are accused of killing our brother, is heading the inquiry. How is that fair?” Jalil said. Instead, Khalil’s family wants the investigation to be headed by members of the judiciary.
 
The official version today is that Khalil and his family are innocent, with Zeeshan being identified was a terrorist.
 
Last month, in a briefing to the Senate, Punjab’s additional chief home secretary told lawmakers that they have recovered an audio recording and a selfie which links 28-year-old Zeeshan to Daesh.
 
Two calls traced to his phone number were made from Afghanistan, where Daesh militants have a stronghold, the secretary added.
 
However, a senator who was part of the address questioned the information and asked how the calls could have been received in the first place. He cited a news report which had quoted Pakistan’s telecommunication body as saying that it would no longer be possible to  make calls directly from Afghanistan to Pakistan.
 
Zeeshan’s family rubbishes the claims. They say he made a living by selling computers. “No one has come to see us. No one has called us to the JIT,” Zeeshan’s mother said from her humble two-bedroom home. “It is like they don’t even want to hear from us."
 
Meanwhile, Punjab's chief minister has ordered for the JIT to submit its final report on February 19. “We have made a commitment,” Raja told Arab News, adding that “the victims will be given complete justice, no matter what needs to be done.”
 
On February 14, a few days before the final report was expected, the head of the JIT, Additional Inspector General (AIG) Syed Ijaz Hussain Shah, told the Lahore High Court that they had not yet interviewed all the eyewitnesses in the case.  “It is sad,” the chief justice of the court said during the hearing, “You are a responsible officer. You should have called all the witnesses by now. We had even provided their phone numbers to you.”  
 
For Khalil's three children, justice delayed continues to be justice denied. It has been three weeks since four-year old Muniba saw her parents killed in cold blood. "She still asks for her mother at night. She doesn’t cry but she doesn’t sleep either,” Muhammad Bashir, Khalil’s aging father said, fighting back the tears streaming down his face.
 
“My son was innocent. His children are innocent,” he said.  

Pakistan plot spin blitz as West Indies return after 19 years

Updated 6 sec ago
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Pakistan plot spin blitz as West Indies return after 19 years

  • Pakistan capitalized on home advantage when England came in October
  • West Indies last toured Pakistan in 2006, before a militant attack on visiting Sri Lanka team

MULTAN, Pakistan: Pakistan will look to formidable spin duo Noman Ali and Sajid Khan to torment the visitors when the West Indies play their first Test series in the country in 19 years from Friday.

Pakistan capitalized on home advantage when England came in October, tailoring pitches for slow bowling to snap a painful winless streak with a 2-1 victory.

Noman and Sajid played starring roles and are joined in the squad by Abrar Ahmed, hinting at a three-pronged spin assault in the two-match series in Multan.

The West Indies last toured Pakistan in 2006, before a militant attack on the visiting Sri Lanka team three years later scared off international sides.

Andre Coley is in charge of a West Indies team which has won only two of its last 13 Tests before he hands over the reins to white-ball coach Daren Sammy in April.

“It’s a new series, a new opportunity,” Coley told reporters as the team arrived last week.

“When you talk about Test cricket, it’s not only the opposition’s skill that provides tests, but the different conditions, different environments and different game situations.”

Pakistan selectors delivered victory against England by taking the bold decision to drop ace batsman Babar Azam and pace pair Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah.

Left-arm spinner Noman and off-spinner Sajid shared 39 of 40 England wickets on pitches baked with patio heaters and dried with fans, clinching the series after losing the first match.

“We bounced back well against England,” said skipper Shan Masood of a series that salvaged his reputation after Pakistan lost their first six matches under his captaincy.

“With backs against the wall we did well. We need to learn how to land the first punch,” he said after his team suffered a 2-0 defeat in South Africa last week.

Azam has regained his place but Shaheen and Naseem remain out in a bid to manage their workloads.

Opener Saim Ayub is suffering from a calf injury sustained in South Africa and his partner Abdullah Shafique is dropped because of poor form, leaving the door open for the return of experienced Imam-ul-Haq.

To match Pakistan’s spin attack, the West Indies will deploy left-armers Gudakesh Motie and Jomel Warrican, as well as Kevin Sinclair.

Kemar Roach will head the pace attack in the absence of Shamar Joseph — out with a shin injury — and Alzarri Joseph who has opted to play T20 cricket in the UAE.

The second Test starts January 25, with the series deciding which team will finish bottom of the World Test Championship table.

Pakistan currently rank eighth and the West Indies ninth and last.

South Africa and Australia have already qualified for June’s WTC final at Lord’s despite Australia’s shock loss to the West Indies in Brisbane last year.

Squads:

Pakistan: Shan Masood (captain), Saud Shakeel, Abrar Ahmed, Babar Azam, Imam-ul-Haq, Kamran Ghulam, Kashif Ali, Khurram Shahzad, Mohammad Ali, Mohammad Huraira, Mohammad Rizwan, Noman Ali, Rohail Nazir, Sajid Khan, Salman Agha

West Indies: Kraigg Brathwaite (captain), Joshua Da Silva, Alick Athanaze, Keacy Carty, Justin Greaves, Kavem Hodge, Tevin Imlach, Amir Jangoo, Mikyle Louis, Gudakesh Motie, Anderson Phillip, Kemar Roach, Kevin Sinclair, Jayden Seales, Jomel Warrican


Pakistani security forces kill four militants in North Waziristan operation

Updated 25 min 31 sec ago
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Pakistani security forces kill four militants in North Waziristan operation

  • The intelligence-based operation was carried out against TTP militants in the Spinwam area
  • Pakistan’s army chief said this week security forces will continue targeted operations against TTP

KARACHI: Pakistani security forces killed four militants in an intelligence-based operation in North Waziristan’s Spinwam area, the military’s media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said on Wednesday.

The operation comes amid a surge in militant violence in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, which Pakistani authorities attribute to cross-border attacks by the proscribed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) from neighboring Afghanistan.

Officials have also accused the Afghan Taliban administration of facilitating these attacks, a claim Kabul has denied.

Pakistan’s army chief, General Asim Munir, told political stakeholders in KP this week that security forces were not planning a full-scale operation against the TTP but would continue targeted intelligence-based actions to counter the banned militant faction.

“On night 14/15 January 2025, Security Forces conducted an intelligence-based operation in general area Spinwam, North Waziristan District on reported presence of khwarij [TTP militants],” the ISPR said in a statement.

“During conduct of the operation, own troops effectively engaged khwarij’s location, and after intense exchange of fire, four khwarij were sent to hell,” it added.

Weapons and ammunition were recovered from the militants, who the ISPR said had been actively involved in numerous violent attacks on security forces and targeted killings of civilians.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif commended the security forces for their efforts.

“The nation is proud of the fearless youth in our security forces,” Sharif said in a statement issued by the Prime Minister’s Office. “We remain determined to thwart the evil designs of the enemies of humanity and will continue to work toward eradicating terrorism from the country.”

The ISPR emphasized the operation underscored Pakistan’s commitment to eliminating militancy, adding security forces were determined to “wipe out the menace of terrorism from the country.”


Pakistan’s Imran Khan defiant even as longer sentence looms

Updated 15 January 2025
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Pakistan’s Imran Khan defiant even as longer sentence looms

  • The former prime minister can get 14-year prison term this month in the Al Qadir Trust graft case
  • Analysts believe the security establishment is using the sentence as a bargaining chip with Khan

ISLAMABAD: Imran Khan, Pakistan’s most popular politician, is facing a 14-year prison term this month in a case his party says is being used to pressure him into silence.
The former prime minister, long a source of frustration for the powerful military, has been in custody since August 2023 and faces a slew of legal cases he says are politically motivated.
A looming verdict for graft linked to a welfare foundation he set up with his wife, the Al-Qadir Trust, is the longest-running of those cases, with a verdict postponed on Monday for a third time.
“The Al-Qadir Trust case, like previous cases, is being dragged on only to pressure me,” Khan said this month in one of his frequent statements railing against authorities and posted on social media by his team.
“But I demand its immediate resolution.”
Analysts say the military establishment is using the sentence as a bargaining chip with Khan, whose popularity undermines a shaky coalition government that kept his party from power in elections last year.
“The establishment’s deal is he comes out and stays quiet, stays decent, until the next election,” said Ayesha Siddiqa, a London-based author and analyst on Pakistan’s military.
Analysts say the military are Pakistan’s kingmakers, although the generals deny interfering in politics.
Khan said he had once been offered a three-year exile abroad and was also “indirectly approached” recently about the possibility of house arrest at his sprawling home on the outskirts of the capital.
“We can assume from the delays that this is a politically motivated judgment. It is a Damocles sword over him,” Khan’s legal adviser Faisal Fareed Chaudhry told AFP.
“The case has lost its credibility,” he said, adding that Khan will not accept any deal to stay silent.
Khan has been convicted and sentenced four times in other cases. Two cases have been overturned by the Supreme Court, while judges have suspended the sentences from the other two.
The specialist anti-graft “accountability court” is set to announce the verdict and sentence in the welfare foundation case on Friday, two days after government envoys are scheduled to meet leaders from Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party to ease tensions.
The PTI has previously sworn to refuse talks with a government its leaders claim is illegitimate, alleging the coalition seized power by rigging February 2024 polls.
They say they will only take part if political prisoners are released and an independent inquiry is launched into allegations of a heavy-handed response by authorities to PTI protests.
Otherwise, Khan has threatened to pull his party from the negotiations and continue with a campaign of civil disobedience that has frequently brought Islamabad to a standstill.
The most recent protests flared around November 26, when the PTI allege at least 10 of their activists were shot dead. The government says five security force members were killed in the chaos.
“The government would like to appear legitimate, and for that they need PTI to sit down in talks with them,” said Asma Faiz, associate professor of political science at Lahore University of Management Sciences.
“Ideally, they would be looking to offer some relief to Imran Khan and his party to appease the domestic and international criticism,” she told AFP.
For now, it appears to be a stalemate, said Michael Kugelman, South Asia Institute director at The Wilson Center in Washington.
“The army might be willing to give Khan a deal that gets him out of jail, but Khan wouldn’t accept the likely conditions of his freedom,” he told AFP.
“Another problem is I can’t imagine the government agreeing to an investigation of November 26. But PTI won’t budge on that demand.”
A stint in exile is common in the trajectory of political leaders in Pakistan who fall out of favor with the military and find themselves before the courts, only to return to power later.
Three-time prime minister Nawaz Sharif served only a fraction of a sentence for corruption, spending several years in London before returning to Pakistan in late 2023.
Former and current president Asif Ali Zardari moved to Dubai after his party was rebuked by the generals.
Both men are now considered the chief architects of the ruling coalition.
But exile might not fit with the carefully worked image of Khan, whose political rise was based on the promise of replacing decades of entrenched dynastic politics.
“I will live and die in Pakistan,” Khan said in a statement shared by his lawyers. “I will fight for my country’s freedom until my last breath, and I expect my nation to do the same.”


Government approves revised deals with 14 independent power producers to reduce electricity costs

Updated 15 January 2025
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Government approves revised deals with 14 independent power producers to reduce electricity costs

  • Revised contracts will save the government about $5 billion over their duration, benefiting consumers
  • Revised agreements will also include a $126 million cut in the profits reaped by these IPPs in the past

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s federal cabinet on Tuesday approved a plan to renegotiate agreements with 14 independent power producers (IPPs), a move aimed at lowering electricity costs and addressing the country’s mounting circular debt crisis, according to a government statement.

The issue of IPPs, dating back to agreements signed in the 1990s and 2000s, gained prominence recently amid soaring inflation and public discontent over high electricity prices.

At the core of the problem are capacity charges, or payments made to IPPs regardless of electricity consumption, which have exacerbated Pakistan’s circular debt, now exceeding Rs2.4 trillion ($8.6 billion), as per the energy minister Sardar Awais Ahmad Laghari.

“These revised agreements, finalized after negotiations with 14 IPPs, propose a reduction of Rs802 billion ($2.9 billion) in costs and profits, including a Rs35 billion ($126 million) cut in past excess profits,” the statement said, adding the revised contracts will save the government Rs1.4 trillion ($5 billion) over their duration, translating into annual savings of Rs137 billion ($493.2 million) for consumers.

The renegotiated deals include 10 IPPs established under the 2002 policy and four under the 1994 policy, with one 1994 agreement terminated altogether.

The government’s renegotiation efforts, also influenced by International Monetary Fund reform recommendations, seek to reduce tariffs and capacity payments to ease fiscal pressure.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif was also quoted in the statement as describing the revised agreements as significant achievement.

“These settlements will not only save the national exchequer but also help eliminate circular debt and reduce electricity prices,” he said.


Muslim World League supports UNICEF on children’s needs in Pakistan, Chad, Afghanistan

Updated 15 January 2025
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Muslim World League supports UNICEF on children’s needs in Pakistan, Chad, Afghanistan

  • $1.5 million agreement will enhance education and skill-building programs in Chad and Pakistan 
  • In Afghanistan, agreement will help to improve, increase coverage of maternal, newborn, childcare services 

ISLAMABAD: UNICEF and The Muslim World League (MWL) have signed a $1.5 million agreement to enhance education and skill-building programs in Chad and Pakistan and to improve maternal, newborn and childcare services in Afghanistan, the UN agency said in a statement this week.

The agreement was signed by UNICEF Representative to Pakistan, Abdullah A. Fadil, on behalf of UNICEF’s Executive Director, Catherine Russell, and MWL’s General Manager of Strategic Partnerships, Dr. Shaima Alluqmani, on the sidelines of a global conference on Muslim World League Initiative hosted by Pakistan in Islamabad last week. 

‘The climate crisis and digital divide are critical challenges faced by children in Pakistan every day. Providing vulnerable children and youth, especially girls, with the education and skills they need will empower them to reach their full potential and help Pakistan prosper,” Fadil said.

“We look forward to working with the Muslim World League to help ensure that no girl is left behind.”

The agreement will support the “Green Skills Training Programme for Non-Formal Education Students” in Pakistan to equip adolescents — especially girls — with essential green skills and digital skills. The program will enhance their employability and empower them to contribute to a sustainable future, the statement said. 

In Chad, the “Renovation of Qur'anic Schools in Lac” program aims to improve access to education and learning environment in religious schools. This program includes teacher training, the construction of 12 classrooms, and the provision of clean water to 500 students in two schools.

As for Afghanistan, the “Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Childcare Health Services (MNCH)” program was designed to increase access to and utilization of high-quality MNCH services across the country through strengthening health facilities, equipping them with necessary supplies, and improving clinical practices. This program seeks to reduce maternal and newborn mortality and morbidity by ensuring better care and coverage.

Dr. Shaima Al-Luqmani, Director General of Strategic Partnerships at the Muslim World League, said the MWL was keen for such agreements to represent an important pillar of the MWL’s initiative, “Girls’ Education in Muslim Communities: Challenges and Opportunities,” through tangible projects that positively impact the future of millions of girls and women in Muslim societies.

Al-Luqmani added that the initiatives and partnerships established by the MWL with various governmental and non-governmental regional and international organizations “have emphasized inclusivity in their programs, whether in the field of girls’ education and its related services and institutions, or in raising awareness and correcting misconceptions and misinterpretations that cast doubt on the undisputed legitimate right of girls to receive education.”

Muslim World League and UNICEF had partnered for over 14 years, delivering impactful results for children and reaching the most vulnerable with humanitarian supplies and services in education, health, social protection, water and sanitation hygiene ‘WASH’.