Solomon2
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Which is why I share many questions with Eyeless on this matter and don't put much basis in my suppositions; indeed, I only offered them because I was asked to speculate.You suppose an awful alot, and in cases like these, suppositions based on nothing don't really carry any weight.
Hmm. And how many such people would have access to a car with illegally-tinted windows?He was in Miranshah...you don't have to have alot of bad blood with anybody to get killed in places like these. There are literally hundreds of reasons somebody could have killed him.
Some people distinguish between two forms of corruption: active and passive. A policeman who is actively corrupt will do something illegal, whereas one who is passively corrupt would never do so but looks the other way or is derelict in his duty or responsibility. The "passive" guy believes he is "good" compared to the other but both types can lead to dreadful results. The Russians (at least under Communist rule when I studied this matter) believe the actively corrupt are preferable because "good" people can suddenly turn bad, usually in difficult moments. So it's better to deal with "bad" people because at least then you know what you're in for.Why do we always have to blame the agencies or Army or FC for anything that happens in the country? Sure the past may not be hunky dory, but that doesn't mean that every other fart by any guy has to be sponsored by agencies.
Who knows when that "good" policeman will take a bribe to let an assassin pass in a car with tinted windows? At least a "bad" policeman can be trusted to demand payoffs from most everyone, yet stop a suspicious vehicle because it endangers his long-term economic welfare.
Make law enforcement accountable to the law and democratic civilian oversight you'll go some way to fixing Pakistan's problems - including the perception that it's the agencies, Army, or FC that are always responsible for killing reporters.