Monday, August 19, 2013

Pakistan jailbreak: Taliban free 248 in Dera Ismail Khan


The militants used a loud hailer to call prisoners out by name, as Orla Guerin reports
Taliban militants have freed 248 prisoners in an assault on a prison in north-west Pakistan, officials say.
Militants armed with automatic weapons, rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and bombs blasted down the walls of the jail in the town of Dera Ismail Khan and streamed inside, reports said.
A gun battle lasting several hours went on into the early hours of Tuesday. At least 13 died, including six police.
Correspondents say it is a huge embarrassment for authorities.
The attack was similar to an assault on a prison in nearby Bannu in April last year, in which almost 400 prisoners were freed.


Reports also suggest intelligence had warned of an impending attempt on the jail two weeks ago.
This latest assault demonstrates the weakness of the Pakistani state, says the BBC's Shahzeb Jillani in Karachi.
The state appears not to have the capacity, and some would say the will, to rein in hardened militants, he says.
Police uniforms
The attack in the town of Dera Ismail Khan began with shooting and huge explosions at around midnight on Monday (15:00 GMT).
Up to 100 attackers, some wearing police uniforms, bombarded the prison with rockets and mortars before going inside.
The town's civil commissioner, Mushtaq Jadoon, said attackers used loudhailers to call the names of particular inmates.
An ensuing gun battle raged for three or four hours.
Katherine Houreld, a correspondent for Reuters news agency, told the BBC it had been a "very sophisticated attack - they blew the electricity line, they breached the walls and they set ambushes for reinforcements".
"When the shooting started, we immediately got into an armed police vehicle and parked on the road in front of the main gate," injured policeman Hidayat Ullah told AP news agency from his hospital bed.
"After this, we heard an explosion and the main gate exploded. After this, we started shooting towards the main gate from our armed vehicle.
"During this time, maybe either a rocket launcher or a mortar shell hit the vehicle. Two of our policemen were killed on the spot, and three of us were injured. We got down from the armed vehicle, and after that I don't know what happened."
The town's prison is a century old and is said not to have been designed for high-security inmates, but houses hundreds of Taliban fighters and militants from other banned groups.
Mr Jadoon said 30 "hardened militants", who had been jailed for their involvement in major attacks or suicide bombings, were among those freed.
He was also quoted as saying that militants had taken away six women, five of them inmates and the other a police officer.
An unnamed official told AFP news agency that jail records and an office had also been torched.
The town is in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, next to Pakistan's mountainous tribal region.
Pakistani policemen stand guard outside the Central Prison on Tuesday after an overnight armed Taliban militant attack in Dera Ismail Khan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province  The audacious attack began when militants blasted the main wall of the jail.
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Among the inmates freed were two local Taliban commanders, Abdul Hakim and Haji Ilyas.
Also released is a sectarian militant, Waleed Akbar, the principle suspect in last year's attacks on Shia mourners in Dera Ismail Khan during the Shia mourning month of Moharram.
Fourteen fugitives were later re-arrested by police, Mr Jadoon said.
A curfew has now been imposed on Dera Ismail Khan as police hunt for the remaining escaped prisoners, but correspondents say this will be a difficult task as they flee into tribal areas.
Mr Jadoon told a local TV station that militants had booby-trapped the building with explosive devices, which had now been defused.
The chief minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Pervez Khattak, branded the incident a failure of several agencies.
Attack 'threats'


A local resident told the agency that the initial blast was so loud that "it rattled every house in the neighbourhood".
The attackers were chanting "God is great" and "Long live the Taliban", officials said.
Pakistani Taliban spokesman Shahidullah Shahid said his group carried out the attack. He said about 300 prisoners had been freed.
The authorities are reported to have received intelligence about an impending attack two weeks ago, but prison officials said they did not expect it to come so soon.
A Taliban spokesman said one of their commanders freed in an assault on a prison in Bannu in northern Pakistan in April last year played a key role in the latest jailbreak.
Correspondents say the authorities will face questions about how militants were able to stage a virtually identical attack in Dera Ismail Khan.
Monday night's violence came hours before Pakistani politicians elected Mamnoon Hussain from the ruling PML-N party as the country's new president.
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Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Jatoi gets capital punishment in Shahzeb Khan murder case

  • Image Credit: AFP
  • Shahrukh Jatoi (C) gestures as he leaves a court after being convicted for murder in the Pakistani port city of Karachi on June 7, 2013. A judge in Pakistan sentenced the son of a powerful businessman to death for murdering a young man in a case that prompted public outrage and a Supreme Court intervention. Jatoi was convicted along with accomplice Siraj Talpur of killing the son of a senior police officer in Karachi in December 2012.
Karachi: An anti-terrorism court (ATC) on Friday handed death sentences to a son of an influential man and his accomplice for murdering a young man in cold blood last year and fleeing abroad conveniently, prompting the apex court of Pakistan to step in to ensure justice.
Judge Mustafa Memon of the ATC awarded death sentence to 19-year Sharukh Jatoi, who is the son of a wealthy man having strong clout in the power corridors.
Another accused Siraj Talpur was given capital punishment whereas Sajjad Talpur and Ghulam Murtaza Lashari, the two other co-accuseds were given life imprisonment.
The young Jatoi came out of the court smiling and waving the sign of victory as his hands were handcuffed.
Public prosecutor Abdul Maroof said the judge awarded Shahrukh Jatoi and Siraj Talpur with the death sentence and half a million rupees fine to each convict.
Witnesses told the court earlier that Jatoi and his three accomplices chased and shot Khan to punish him for roughing up their servant who teased Khan’s sister while returning home from a wedding in December 2012 in a posh area of this southern port city.
All the four accused pleaded not guilty and defended the case in the court. Their lawyer said the ATC verdict was not acceptable to them and they would go to an appellant court to get the verdict reversed.
“This verdict is not acceptable to us,” said Shaukat Zuberi, the defence lawyer of Jatoi.
“We will file the appeal in the high court within seven days once we get the detailed judgement,” he told the media.
Maroof said they would counter the appeal in the high court.
The influential family of Jatoi did not allow police to register a murder case enraging civil society that rallied at the roads for several days until the chief justice of Pakistan took the notice of the murder.
The case became a hallmark in this mega city where average 250 people are murdered every month for past several years with a negligible prosecution.
Jatoi’s father, Sikandar Ali Jatoi owns a cement factor in Hyderabad and also owns Awaz TV channel. He is said to be the major recipient of huge contracts of National Highway Authority (NHA) in the past five years.
It was talk of the town that rich Sikandar Jatoi was offering hundreds of millions of rupees as blood money to the family of Khan as a compensation. It is also said that the victim’s family was under pressure to accept the offer.
The family rejected the option.
“There was no pressure on us from anywhere,” Aurangzeb Khan, the father of the murdered youth told media outside his apartment.
Khan’s mother who stood by her husband said nothing could have compensated their loss and she wanted to see the murderers executed to become an example.
“We took stand for the children of the nation and for their safety as no son of rich men could dare repeat it,” Ambreen Khan, the mother said.

Shahzeb murder case: Shahrukh Jatoi sentenced to death

KARACHI: An anti-terrorism court (ATC) in Karachi sentenced Shahrukh Jatoi, the main accused in the Shahzeb murder case, to death in its verdict on Friday.
Moreover, another suspect, Siraj Talpur, was also awarded capital punishment for his role in the crime.
Whereas, two other suspects in the case, Sajjad Ali Talpur and Ghulam Murtaza Lashari were sentenced to life imprisonment.
The ATC also announced that the convicted individuals would have to pay a fine of Rs 500,000 each. Moreover, Jatoi was handed an added three years prison sentence for illegal possession of weapons.
As soon as the judgment was announced, Jatoi's brother got into an argument with judges and had to be taken out of the court's premises.
Due to which, the detailed judgment of the case could not be signed by those convicted and they were sent away. They were, however, called back to the court's premises and asked to sign the judgment.
The convicted individuals were then taken towards central jail.
Later, family members of those convicted said they would file an appeal challenging the court's judgment.
Moreover, Jatoi's lawyer, Shaukat Hussain Zuberi, said he would file an appeal within seven days of today's ruling. Zuberi said the case's investigation was flawed from the very beginning.
A senior advocate, Kamal Azfar, recently filed a petition in the Sindh High Court to revisit the evidence on the weapon from which Jatoi fired at Shahzeb. That petition was also rejected today.
Speaking to DawnNews, Shahzaib's father said he was satisfied with the court's verdict.
Twenty-year-old Shahzeb Khan was gunned down on the night of December 24, 2012 when he was returning home along with his sister after attending a wedding. Shahzeb, son of a DSP, was murdered reportedly after he had an altercation with one of the suspects’ servant who had allegedly given verbal threats to the victim’s sister.
Jatoi, Siraj Talpur, his younger brother Sajjad Talpur and their house servant Ghulam Murtaza Lashari were charged with killing Shahzeb in the city’s Defence Housing Authority (DHA).
The case had attracted much media attention after the Supreme Court took a suo motu notice of the murder.

Shahzeb Khan murder: Court rejects bail of five, three others accepted

Shahzeb Khan. PHOTO: FILE
KARACHI: The Malir Court in Karachi has cancelled the bails of five suspects who had helped Shahrukh Jataoi escape abroad, while protective bails of three, including Sharukh Jatoi’s cousin Nawab Jataoi, have been approved, Express News reported.
The court has dismissed bail requests of the owner of the travel agency Abu Bakar Zakria, Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) protocol officer Wasih Akhtar, Khurram Muhammad, Nawab Jataoi and Salman Ali Shah.
The suspects refused to be arrested after the court’s decision.
Three of the suspects took shelter in the Malir Bar building, while discussions for their arrest are still going on.
The police has so far managed to arrest just one suspect, Salman Shah.
Shahzeb was killed by Shahrukh Jatoi near Mubarak Masjid in DHA. The killing resulted from a small argument he had with Nawab Siraj Talpur, when the latter’s servant verbally harassed his sister. Talpur and his friend, Jatoi, allegedly followed Shahzeb and shot him.

Shahzeb Khan’s Murder

 
Just like Madame Defarge of Charles Dickens’ ‘A Tale of Two Cities’ silently kept knitting the registry of all those condemned to death and punishment, when the simple and humble peasants eventually rise to the massacre of the oppressors, the nature is writing down all the names and crimes of the feudals acting as pharaohs in the land of the pure. Just as the ‘bloody red queen’ of Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland uses pigs as her foot rest, flamingo as a mallet, hedgehog as her croquet ball and monkeys as her throne support, feudals in Pakistan enslave the commoners and treat them like animals. You annoy them slightly and the verdict comes ‘Off with his head’ and job done. Remember the pharaoh who said to Moses ‘I give life and I give death’. These are no different.
An excerpt from We are all Shahzeb Khan by Aisha Aijaz
Updates:
17th January, 2013
9th January, 2013
- News reports surface about Shahrukh Jatoi escaping to US from Dubai.
-Shahzeb’s father, DSP Aurangzeb Khan says that Shahrukh is under custody in Dubai. Due to the sensitive nature of where he was found in Dubai, the FIA and police are delaying his arrival process.

8th January, 2013
  • Shahrukh Jatoi, the prime accused in the murder of Shahzeb Khan was arrested in Dubai with assistance from Interpol and Dubai CID authorities.
  • Police is likely to arrive in Pakistan within next 24hours.
7th January, 2013

- Shahzeb’s Facebook Page has demanded a formal apology from Pakistan Today for trying to sabotage a Movement For Justice.
- A stark reflection of YELLOW JOURNALISM in Pakistan.
-After immense outrage by supporters on Social media, (Facebook, Twitter). Pakistan Today has taken down the “fake story” about Shahzeb’s father.