ISI kills Saleem Shahzad – by Omar Khattab
Saleem Shahzad’s family should nominate General Kiyani and General Pasha as prime suspects
Yesterday the representative of the Pakistan Human Rights Commission said that Saleem Shahzad was in the custody of the ISI. He added: “The ISI is the major human rights abuser in Pakistan and it frequently keeps abusing and torturing those journalists it disagrees with.”
And now Saleem Shahzad is no more than a corpse. The ISI remains above the law. Pakistan’s Islamo-fascist media led by the Geo mafia will point the finger at “the foreign hands” which means India and the United States. But no one will say a word about the ISI. World’s most incompetent and yet most murderous outfit, the ISI, has every legal and illegal immunity to kill people in the name of national security. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was a threat to the national security; later Benazir was a security risk, and now Saleem Shahzad has been given his due for reporting on the attack on the PNS Mehran naval base in Karachi. The pro-ISI and pro-Taliban media led by Geo has been criticizing those handful of journalists who have tried to identify our military’s complicity with the Taliban. These brave journalists have been called traitors who are not helping the military “in the hour of need”.
And now a horrible example has been made of Saleem Shahzad. The message is very clear: glorify the generals, support their illegal pillage of Pakistan, or get ready to be killed. If only Saleem Shahzad had a gun, the ISI kidnappers would have run away like rats. It is a matter of record that if you are an unarmed “bloody civilian,” our “armed forces” deal with you with an iron hand. But once you take up the arms against them, they chicken out and pee in their pants just like they have routinely done whenever confronted by Indian soldiers.
We at Let Us Build Pakistan sympathize with the family of Saleem Shahzad. We urge them to file the FIR and nominate General Kiyani and General Pasha as the main suspects.
Army Generals are mad dogs (pagal kuttay) and pigs.
Its about time we realized that we live in an infected state where telling the truth for a change is a license to get shot (Saleem Shahzad).Shoot down innocent people and your welcomed as heroes of the day(THE DESPICABLE FC IN BALOCHISTAN)..Talk about corrupt leadership (Mr 10% and his sidekicks) and your called an enemy of democracy (Democracy my ASS!)..Call your generals traitors and war criminals (Armed Forces and ISI) you automatically qualify to be an indian agent.If this is what its like to question people responsible for the mess we are in than i rather call myself a Terrorist cause thats the only category a concerned Pakistani really fits in today..What a Shame!!
I’m a journalism student from India and it pains me to hear about Saleem Shahzad death. I’m trying to take this in perspective by imagining what will happen if god forbid something like this happens to a say Barkha Dutt or any Indian journalist or any human being for that matter. I find, just the thought of it terrifying. I can only offer my sympathy to you and I hope you rise from this dark hour and that there may be peace in your country and between ours. If there is one thing I’ve learnt from this is that you are blessed with a very courageous Media which I am now inspired by. Please don’t bow down to pressure by those who give your country a bad name. Some day, god willing you will prevail.
It appears ISI is being pushed to US courts soon and more surprising aspects would come out when they nab more top layer former & present leaders. Mean time it is the duty of Pakistanis to bring both the past and present Military & ISI leaders to International court of Justice.
World community must not sit and watch. USA & UN must name ISI as terror organization immediately.
سلیم شہزاد کی کہانی
اسلام آباد سے لاپتہ ہونے والے صحافی سلیم شہزاد جن کی گمشدگی کے دو دن بعد ان کی لاش منڈی بھاؤ الدین کی ایک نہر سے برآمد ہوئی آئی ایس آئی کے خلاف ماضی میں کئی خبریں فائل کر چکے تھے لیکن ان کی ہلاکت سے چند دن قبل ان کی جو خبر ایشیا ٹائمز میں شائع ہوئی وہ پی این مہران کراچی پر دہشت گردوں کے حملوں کے بارے میں تھی۔
اس سٹوری میں انھوں نے دعوی کیا تھا کہ دہشت گردوں نے چند قیدیوں کی رہائی پر نیوی کے حکام سے جاری مذاکرات کی ناکامی کی صورت میں پہلے نیوی کی بسوں پر دو حملے کیے اس کے بعد انھوں نے پی این ایس مہران پر حملہ کیا اور دو انتہائی قیمتی جہازوں کو تباہ کر دیا۔
سلیم شہزاد کی جس تصویر سے شناخت کی گئی ہے اس سے صاف ظاہر ہوتا ہے کہ ان کو ہلاک کیے جانے سے قبل تشدد کا نشانہ بنایا گیا تھا۔
سلیم شہزاد کی گمشدگی کے بعد ان کی بیوی نے انسانی حقوق کی بین الاقوامی تنظیم ہیومن رائٹس واچ علی دایان حسن کو فون کرکے ان کی گمشدگی کے بارے میں آگاہ کیا۔ ان کا کہنا تھا کہ سلیم شہزاد نے انھیں ہدایت کی تھی اگر انھیں کچھ ہوجائے تو وہ علی دایان حسن کو مطلع کریں۔
علی دایان کے مطابق سلیم شہزاد کافی عرصے سے خطرہ محسوس کر رہے تھے۔ علی دایان نے مزید کہا کہ وہ اس نتیجے پر پہنچے ہیں کہ انھیں آئی ایس آئی نے ہی اغواء کیا تھا۔
ہیومن رائٹس واچ کو چند رابطہ کاروں نے بتایا تھا کہ سلیم شہزاد آئی ایس آئی کی حراست میں ہیں۔ ان رابطہ کاروں کو براہ راست ایجنسی نے بتایا تھا کہ انھیں آئی ایس آئی ہی نے اٹھایا تھا۔
علی دایان نے مزید کہا کہ اسلام آباد کے ایک انتہائی حساس علاقے سے آئی ایس آئی ہی ایک شخص کو اس کی گاڑی سمیت ایسے غائب کر سکتی ہے کہ اس کا سراغ ہی نہ ملے۔
ہیومن رائٹس واچ کو بتایا گیا کہ شہزاد پیر کی رات تک گھر پہنچ جائیں گے۔
علی دایان نے کہا کہ انھیں بتایا گیا تھا کہ پہلے شہزاد کا موبائل فون بحال کر دیا جائے گا تاکہ وہ اپنے گھر والوں سے بات کر سکیں اور اس کے بعد وہ واپس پہنچ جائیں گے۔
منگل کی دوپہر تک جب سلیم شہزاد کے بارے میں کچھ معلوم نہیں ہو سکا تو علی دایان کو ان کا ایک پرانا ای میل یاد آیا جو انھوں نے اٹھارہ اکتوبر دو ہزار دس کو بھیجا تھا۔ اس ای میل کے بارے میں سلیم شہزاد نے کہا تھا کہ ان کی گمشدگی کی صورت میں اس ای میل کو جاری کر دیا جائے۔
اس ای میل میں سلیم شہزاد نے ان کو لاحق خطرات کے بارے میں بات کی تھی۔
ہویمن رائٹس نے کہا ہے کہ انہوں نے سلیم شہزاد کی گمشدگی کے بارے میں حکومت پاکستان سے متعدد مرتبہ رابطہ کرنے کی کوشش کی لیکن حکومت نے اس سلسلے میں کوئی جواب نہیں دیا۔
گزشتہ سال اکتوبر میں سلیم شہزاد کو ایک دن قبل شائع ہونے والی ایک رپورٹ پر بات کرنے کے لیے آئی ایس آئی کے ہیڈکواٹر میں طلب کیا گیا۔
ایشیا ٹائمز میں شائع ہونے والی متعلقہ رپورٹ میں سلیم شہزاد نے کہا تھا کہ پاکستان نے افغان طالبان کے کمانڈر ملاء برادر کو مذاکرات میں حصہ لینے کے لیے خاموشی سے رہا کر دیا ہے۔
سلیم شہزاد کی ای میل میں کہا گیا کہ آئی ایس آئی کے ہیڈکواٹر میں ان سے بحریہ کے دو اہلکاروں ریئر ایڈمرل عدنان نواز اور کماڈور خالد پرویز نے ملاقات کی تھی۔ اس ملاقات میں سلیم شہزاد کو بتایا گیا کہ آئی ایس آئی نے ایک دہشت گردو کو گرفتار کیا ہے جس کے پاس سے ڈائری اور ٹیلی فون نمبروں کی ایک فہرست برآمد ہوئی ہے اور اگر ان کا نام اس فہرست میں شامل ہوا تو انھیں آگاہ کر دیا جائے گا۔
علی دایان حسن نے کہا کہ اس بیان کو ایک دھمکی قرار دیا جا سکتا ہے۔ انھوں نے کہا کہ جس انداز میں یہ بیان جاری کیا گیا وہ دھمکی ہی تصور کیا جا سکتا ہے۔ شہزاد کے مطابق آئی ایس آئی سے ان کی باقی ملاقات انتہائی خوشگوار اور بردرانہ ماحول میں ہوئی۔
اس ای میل میں سلیم شہزاد نے مزید کہا کہ آئی ایس آئی کے مذکوراہ افسران ان سے پوچھتے رہے کہ ان کی سٹوری میں دی گئی معلومات انھیں کس نے فراہم کی۔
شہزاد کا کہنا تھا کہ انھوں نے اپنے ذرائع کا نام لینے سے انکار کر دیا اور کہا کہ ایک خفیہ اہلکار نے انھیں یہ معلومات فراہم کی تھی اور بعد میں طالبان نے اس کی تصدیق کی تھی۔
شہزاد کے مطابق انھیں اپنی خبر کی تردید کرنے کو کہا گیا لیکن انھوں نے آئی ایس آئی کی بات ماننے سے انکار کر دیا۔
سلیم شہزاد کے ذرائع ابلاغ کے دوستوں اور ساتھیوں کا کہنا ہے کہ آئی ایس آئی نے ان کے ذرائع کے بارے میں معلوم کرنے کے لیے انھیں اٹھایا تھا۔
http://www.bbc.co.uk/urdu/pakistan/2011/05/110531_times_story_fz.shtml
Please, dont compare a non reputed type journalist Mr Saleem shahzad with great leaders of Pakistan Mr Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and Mrs Benazir Bhutto. Statement of Mr Ali Dihan give a very clear picture and evidence that Mr saleem shahzad has been kidnapped and later killed by someone on the pretext of his meeting with ISI to malign /defame ISI, since his killing would be directly / easily diverted / attached to ISI because of his meeting with ISI and denial of their request by Mr Saleem Shahzad.
He was very close to us, and as far as we know, he was interrogated by ISI and killed later by someone else.
Anti called in the morning, when he did not return at the given time, a day had gone by and no clue of him. I knew it right then, he won’t return alive. Inna Lilla ha wa Inna ilehay Rajaoon
سارے بلاگرز جو طالبان مخالف ہیں ، جو ملا ملٹری دہشتگردی کو ایکسپوز کرتے ہیں اور پروپگینڈے کے جواب دیتے ہیں ،وہ اپنی خیر منا لیں ، صحافیوں کو تو پیغام مل چکا اب لگتا ہے بلاگرز کی باری ہوگی ، فورمز پر کچھ ریٹائر فوجی ایڈمن بنے ہوئے ہیں ان سے اچھی بنا کر رکھی جائے ، امریکا پر تنققید اور طالبان کو مقبول بنانے کی کوشش کرتے رہو ،جماعت اسلامی ،عمران خان ،حمید گل جو کہ رہے ہیں ووہی کہتے رہو …. دہشتگردوں کو بدنام نہ کرو اگر اپنی جان پیاری ہے .ملا عمر اب ہمارا خلیفہ ہے اور افغانستان ہمارا مستقبل …….
طالبان مخالف بلاگرز ذرا سوچ لیں اب ، خلافت آرہی ہے …تباہی آرہی ہے ..خوں خراب ہو رہا ہے ، قاتلوں کو کچھ نہ کہو…..ڈبل گیم نہیں چلے گا تو مدارس کیسے چلیں گے …ہوش کے ناخن لو …. بس منور حسن ،حمید گل ،انصار عباسی ،حامد میر اور عمران خان کی زبان بولو ، یہی سٹیبلشمنٹ چاہتی ہے ….
Lord accept his deeds and resurrect him in the along with others in the Hearts of green birds, Duas for his family.
interesting how hrw in pak has a local head, wheras in bangladesh the institution of whiteness is headed by a white man.
lets hope for a biiiig turnout at his funeral procession.
ہم وہ ڈھیٹ ہڈی ہیں ،وہ چکنے گھڑے ہیں جو پچلے دس سالوں سے میڈیا پر ہونے والے طالبان تحریک پروپگینڈے سے مرغوب نہیں ہو سکے ،حامد میر ،عرفان صدیقی ،منور حسن ،عمران خان ،حمید گل ،ہارون رشید ،آسما چودری ،طلعت حسین ،شاہد مسعود اور نہ جانے کون کون ہمیں ایک خاص انداز سے سوچنے پر مجبور کرتا رہا ،سارا ملک ووہی سوچتا تھا جو یہ کہتے تھے ،پر ہم اور ہمارے جیسے ڈھیٹ لوگ فورمز پر آکر ..میں نہیں مانتا ،میں نہیں مانتا کی رٹ لگاتے رہتے ہیں .. طالبان کے حمایتیوں سے مقابلے کرنا ایسا ہی ہے جیسے وہ کوئی برا وکیل کسی قتل کی وکالت کر رہا ہو اور جس کا جرم بھی صاف ظاہر ہو . شاید اگلی نسل اس دہشتگرد سوچ سے نکل آے
زالان
Salim Shehzad
Another victim of Be Sharam & Be Ghairat Brigade
Nisar mein teri galyun pey aiy watan ke jahan
Chali hai rasm key koi na sar utha key chaley
Pakistan’s spy agencies are suspected of ties to reporter’s death
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Last week, a prominent Pakistani investigative reporter published an article alleging that al-Qaeda had infiltrated the Pakistan navy and carried out the recent attack on a naval air base. On Tuesday, the journalist’s body — his face severely beaten — was found 100 miles from his home in this capital city, two days after he disappeared.
Syed Saleem Shahzad’s killing was payback, other journalists and human rights activists said they believed — not from militants, but from Pakistan’s fearsome spy agencies. Shahzad had written before about their dealings with Islamist insurgents, and intelligence officers had warned him.
“I am forwarding this email to you for your record only if in case something happens to me or my family in future,” Shahzad, 40, wrote last October to the Pakistan representative of Human Rights Watch, sharing details of a meeting he had just had with officers from Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI. Shahzad suggested that they had threatened him, an experience that Pakistani journalists, activists and politicians say is not uncommon.
But those threats rarely end in killing, and Shahzad’s death immediately sparked fresh criticism of Pakistan’s intelligence apparatus. The “agencies,” as they are known here, last month faced unusual public condemnation for their apparent failure to locate Osama bin Laden in a garrison city, as well as allegations that they had harbored him.
On Tuesday, the focus was on activities Pakistan’s spies are better known for domestically: punishing those who cross the powerful military, the main locus of power in a nation with a weak civilian government.
An ISI official denied that the agency was involved in Shahzad’s death. “Show us the proof. Otherwise, it’s totally absurd,” the official said.
Shahzad’s killing also renewed attention on the alleged crossover between militants and Pakistan’s security forces, some of which he outlined in his recent article for the Hong Kong-based Asia Times Online, for which he was the Pakistan bureau chief. According to Shahzad’s reporting, last week’s attack on a Karachi naval base was a response to the Pakistani navy’s detection of al-Qaeda cells within its ranks, and it followed failed discussions between the navy and al-Qaeda about the release of naval officers arrested on suspicions of links to the terrorist group.
On Monday, Pakistani media reported that a former navy commando had been detained for questioning in the attack.
U.S. intelligence analysts are skeptical that al-Qaeda has penetrated Pakistan’s armed forces. “There’s not likely to be an organized al-Qaeda cell within the Pakistan navy,” a U.S. official said.
But U.S. officials said that there is a long-standing concern over the presence of Islamic militants — what one official referred to as “onesies and twosies” — among Pakistan’s military branches. Pakistan’s leaders privately share this concern, U.S. officials said.
On the radar
The author of a new book on al-Qaeda and the Taliban, Shahzad was considered well connected to both the military establishment and militant groups. He persisted though the ISI had warned him several times about articles they “deemed detrimental to Pakistan’s national interests or image,” according to the Asia Times Online.
In October, Shahzad told Human Rights Watch, the ISI summoned him over an article that said Pakistan had released Abdul Ghani Baradar, an Afghan Taliban commander arrested in Karachi in early 2010, so that he could play a part in reconciliation talks in Afghanistan. An ISI official asked Shahzad to identify his source and write a denial; Shahzad said he declined, allowing only that the story was leaked by intelligence and confirmed by “the most credible” Taliban source.
Then, Shahzad said, the official added what he called a “favor,” telling him a militant had recently been arrested.
“The terrorist had a hit list with him,” the ISI official said, according to Shahzad’s written account. “If I find your name on the list I will certainly let you know.”
Shahzad disappeared Sunday evening as he drove through a genteel sector of Islamabad on the way to an interview at a television station. Before his body was found, Human Rights Watch said “credible sources” said they believed that he had been abducted by intelligence agents but that the sources indicated Shahzad would be released. Instead, police announced Tuesday that his body had been found, and photos aired on television indicated he had been beaten.
Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani condemned the killing and ordered an investigation.
Ali Dayan Hasan, the Pakistan representative for Human Rights Watch, said it would have been difficult for anyone unaffiliated with the security agencies to abduct a man and his car from Islamabad, a city riddled with police checkpoints.
More important, he and journalists said, Shahzad’s disappearance and treatment bore the hallmarks of Pakistan’s intelligence agencies — a topic few here are willing to discuss openly. Politicians whisper about being harassed and spied on. Nationalist activists in the province of Balochistan, whom the security establishment views as insurgents, are regularly abducted or killed.
In April, the main opposition party, the Pakistan Muslim League-N, sharply criticized the spy agencies and vowed to bring evidence about their extralegal activities to parliament. In a recent interview, however, opposition leader Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said it would not be “appropriate” to detail those allegations until the government asked for them, which it has not.
“There should not be states within states. There should not be parallel policies being run by intelligence agencies,” he said.
Of the intelligence services, a Pakistani government official said: “They have two purposes in life: One is keeping control at home, and the other is the five letters,” a reference to the Pakistan military’s main foe, India.
Inhibiting newsgathering
In a nation where the big story is Islamist insurgency and the military’s fight against it, Pakistani journalists regularly receive threats from both sides, Hasan said. As a result, few journalists among Pakistan’s boisterous press corps are willing to openly criticize the military.
“It is becoming very dangerous indeed for journalists to perform their professional duties,” Hasan said.
Pakistan was the world’s most dangerous place for journalists in 2010, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, which said eight reporters were killed, most in militant attacks. Other journalists were abducted, including Umar Cheema, an investigative reporter for the News, an English-language daily.
Cheema, who had written several articles scrutinizing the army, says he was kidnapped from Islamabad and beaten for six hours. He has since spoken out about his ordeal, which he said he has determined was carried out by the ISI. In an interview, Cheema said he harbored doubts that the agency would go so far as to kill Shahzad. Nevertheless, he said, he and his colleagues now feel more vulnerable.
“It’s a very strong message to the journalist community,” Cheema said. “If the ISI is not involved, they should come up with some evidence who has done it. Just denying it won’t work. It won’t remove the suspicions of the people.”
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia-pacific/pakistans-spy-agencies-are-suspected-of-ties-to-reporters-death/2011/05/31/AGhrMhFH_story.html
convincingly written with such an abundance of proof that the intelligence agencies could never escape the long arm of law had it been in any other country. here the interior minister has gone on record to say that the killing appears to be a personal vendetta even before any investigation has commenced– so much so for this case—CLOSED EVEN BEFORE IT WAS OPENED. and if you ask me how can i predict this with so much confidence, my answer is – ELEMENTARY DEAR WATSON-THIS IS PAKISTAN!
Pakistan spy agency faces more heat after reporter’s killing
(Reuters) – Speculation that Pakistan’s military spy agency had a hand in the death of a prominent journalist has further discredited the organisation already facing one of its worst crises after the killing of Osama bin Laden on Pakistani soil.
Saleem Shahzad, who worked for Hong-Kong based Asia Times Online and Italian news agency Adnkronos International, disappeared from Islamabad on Sunday and his body was found in a
canal with what police said were torture marks.
Suspicions immediately fell on the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency, bringing more bad publicity after the killing of bin Laden by U.S. special forces near the capital. The raid, which Pakistan failed to detect or stop, shattered the myth that the agency is omnipotent.
“The ISI’s image had already been tarnished and it is under so much pressure,” said a former ISI officer. “It’s never been as bad as this before.”
Shahzad was investigating suspected links between the military and al Qaeda, a highly sensitive subject at a time when Washington is wondering how bin Laden was able to live for years in a town about a two hour drive from ISI headquarters.
Human Rights Watch said Shahzad, a 40-year-old father of three, had voiced concerns about his safety after receiving threatening telephone calls from the ISI and was under surveillance since 2010.
ISI officials were not available for comment. Analysts have not ruled out the possibility that he may have been killed by militants. Shahzad often wrote about al Qaeda and other groups.
“PUSHED TO THE WALL”
Pakistan has a vibrant press which often attacks the government over everything from corruption to poor services and economic stagnation.
But criticism of the ISI or military is rare.
Reporters say Shahzad’s death raises troubling questions about freedoms in Pakistan, which receives billions in aid from ally Washington and describes itself is a democracy.
“It means we are being pushed to the wall and losing space to tyranny if the ISI carried this out,” said Umar Cheema, a journalist who knows all about the risks of investigating Pakistan’s security establishment.
Last year, he was picked up by suspected intelligence agents, driven to an unknown location, stripped naked and whipped with leather and a wooden rod, he said.
“Pakistan is my beloved country. But nobody is safe in Pakistan. I live in what I call self-imposed house arrest because I am scared to go out,” said Cheema.
Shahzad was killed after he wrote a story that claimed al Qaeda attacked a naval base in Karachi last month after negotiations with the military to release two naval officials accused of militant links broke down.
That assault further humiliated the Pakistani military.
Some believe that with its loss of credibility after the bin Laden fiasco, and the naval base siege, the ISI may come under more public scrutiny for its apparent failure to tackle militancy and ease suicide bombings.
“Fewer people believe that the ISI is this powerful agency. People will start asking tougher questions,” said Rifaat Hussain, head of the Department of Defence and Strategic Studies at Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad.
“They may be more willing to ask why the ISI is tapping the telephones of the opposition when it should be providing more security for the country.”
But equally likely is that journalists will think twice about writing hard-hitting stories after Shahzad’s death.
Others have died in similar circumstances in Pakistan, the world’s most dangerous country for journalists, according to Reporters Without Borders.
“It is a death. The death of expression,” said Matiullah Jan, a correspondent with Dawn News television.
“There is an apprehension in certain quarters that it’s meant to send a shut-up message.”
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/06/01/uk-pakistan-journalist-idUKTRE75023620110601
Pakistan reporter killed after claimed threats
(CBS/AP) KARACHI, Pakistan – Hundreds are mourning a Pakistani journalist slain this week after he reported being threatened by intelligence agents.
Syed Saleem Shahzad wrote about terrorism and security for the Asia Times Online and other publications. Police said the 40-year-old’s body bore signs of torture when it was found Tuesday after he had been missing for two days.
In a recent article, Shahzad claimed the Pakistani navy had likely been infiltrated by members of al Qaeda, reports The Washington Post. He claimed it was those insurgents who made it possible for militants to stage a deadly attack on a naval base.
After that report, Shahzad told Human Rights Watch of threats from Pakistani intelligence officers. His funeral was held Wednesday in Karachi.
According to the Post, Shahzad was found 100 miles from his home in the capital city with his face badly beaten.
Pakistani is one of the deadliest countries for reporters. Journalists face threats from militants and security agencies.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/06/01/501364/main20067846.shtml
It is not a true democracy with incumbent freedoms when one needs to be in fear of one’s life regarding free speech and freedom of the press to criticize the government and security agencies. This brutality needs to enrage the populace and move them to action to put pressure on the government to protect society from its security apparatus and military rogue elements.
I don’t understand why this tragedy should bring out unrelated slurs, such as “Mr 10% and his sidekicks.” While it is true there are some corruption and lack of action on President Zardari’s part, and he certainly should be moved to more decisive action, but it isn’t the government that killed Shahzad, it is the ISI operatives, undermining Pakistan’s democratic freedoms.
@Mr. Walker, much of the corruption allegations against Mr. Zardari are a smokescreen to hide the truly corrupt elite that is part of the establishment. Wrt the tragic death of Saleem Shahzad, the PPP government is in no position to say much; especially when one of its harshed critics, Mr. Najam Sethi himself is part of the cover up and is terming Shahzad’s death an “accident”. FYI, PPP has already sent its representatives to condole with SS’s family. As for going after the ISI, even the US has failed and with good reason- the establishment here is very dangerous.
im 100 percent sure this website is controlled by RAW and CIA. all those who defame my home land.why u dont rise you voice for palistine and kashmir
Saleem Shahzad is no more than a corpse. The ISI remains above the law. Pakistan’s Islamo-fascist media led by the Geo mafia will point the finger at “the foreign hands” which means India and the United States. But no one will say a word about the ISI. World’s most incompetent and yet most murderous outfit, the ISI, has every legal and illegal immunity to kill people in the name of national security. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was a threat to the national security; later Benazir was a security risk, and now Saleem Shahzad has been given his due for reporting on the attack on the PNS Mehran naval base in Karachi. The pro-ISI and pro-Taliban media led by Geo has been criticizing that handful of journalists who have tried to identify our military’s complicity with the Taliban. These brave journalists have been called traitors who are not helping the military “in the hour of need”.
and the family of Saleem Shazad too nominate Asif Ali Zardari, Rehman Malik and Yousuf Raza Gilani for giving extention to Kiyani and Pasha
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