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Wali Khan Babar’s Murder Mystery by Mazhar Abbas (prominent crime reporter)

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Wali Khan Babar’s Murder Mystery

Published on Thursday September 26 2013

Mazhar Abbas

The murder case of a young Pakistani journalist, Wali Khan Babar, has all the elements of an edge of the seat suspense drama, albeit one that ends in tragedy. Wali Babar was shot dead in January, 2011 followed by murders of at least five people allegedly linked to his court case that is likely to conclude on Oct 10th.



Supreme Court of Pakistan and Chief Justice of Pakistan, Mr Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry must be given credit for ensuring a speedy trial. However, the case also exposed the weakness of the judicial and police system in the face of organized crime by not being able to protect witnesses.



If not a suspense drama, the whole case is certainly brings to mind a murder mystery. It is unprecedented in the manner in which one person after another linked with this case was assassinated leading to the conclusion that the story may not end with the verdict: it may just take another twist.



In the murders that followed Wali Babar’s, one person was found in a “bori” – gummy bag – the other was killed in his own house, another was chased after he shifted from one house to another but finally become a target to assailants after he shifted to a fourth house.



It is also a case in which the main accused was killed in a “police encounter,” involving the chief investigator of the case.



But the killing of Babar and people linked with investigation led to the major legislation in the Sindh Assembly where last week a “Witness Protection Bill,” was passed. A ray of hope in cases that fail to get anywhere due to threats to witnesses, though much still need to be done.



Journalist murder cases hardly see any trial and are normally closed as “blind cases.” At least this is what the record of around 100 cases showed. The only case in which the accused were arrested, tried and convicted within five months was that of US reporter Daniel Pearl of theWall Street Journal. One of the reasons for this could be enormous pressure from the US government and the organization he worked for. Interestingly, an appeal against the court verdict in the same case has been pending for the last 11 years.



The only case of Pakistani journalist which went to trial court and the accused were arrested was of photojournalist Munir Sangi, who worked with the Sindhi language news channel KTN. Sangi was killed in Larkana while covering gun battle between two Unar tribes. Those arrested in this case includes former Sindh Minister Altaf Unar. The minister and others were later released on bail while Sangi’s widow and family faced and still face hardship.



In Babar’s case five accused are in jail while one of the main accused Liaquat was killed in an alleged police encounter in May 2012.

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Liaquat Bangash of the ANP


But Babar’s case is something more than merely a murder of a journalist. It remind one of murders of journalist in Colombia or Mexico where the underworld has a part to play.



Last week in the Supreme Court when Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry enquired about Babar’s case, the public prosecutor’s reply stunned the five-member bench and raised questions about the fate of this important case.



Prosecutor Shadat Awan informed the Court that only one witness was assassinated and denied media reports that five or six witnesses were killed.



“Sir, only witness was killed while the only witness alive has been provided complete protection,” Awan said.



“Are you sure?” CJP Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry asked.



“Yes, others killed were not witnesses in this case but related to the investigation official involved in this case,” Awan insisted.



However, when the bench sought the record and recalled the briefing given to them in the presence of the Mr Awan, who has a good track record as a lawyer, he assured the Court that he would look into the matter. The case is likely to conclude on October 10th, the date fixed by the lower court for final argument.



I was present in the Supreme Court in Karachi when it was hearing the “Karachi law and order implementation case”. The bench is hearing this case for the last two years during which Wali Babar’s case was cited quite a few time.



The court not only directed the authorities to provide complete protection to the only living witness of the case but also enquired about the proceedings.



Babar joined GEO, Pakistan’s leading Urdu language news network, a few years back. During the initial years of his career, he tried to expose the land mafia and was killed in what appears to be a planned murder.



Much has been written about the case and the media support community around the world is well aware of the high profile murder of a young Journalist. There were also a lot of speculations about the motive behind the murder – (1) Killed in the line of duty, (2) a personal matter, and (3) his political background.



Police as well as GEO believes he was killed for his work. His case became high profile as several of the witnesses were killed, something rare in a murder case of a journalist in Pakistan.



The question about the killing of witnesses came when reference was made about the recently passed “Witness Protection Bill,” by the Sindh Assembly. The legislation is certainly worth praising but one doubt it would be able to protect the witness in Wali Babar’s case.



One of the witnesses killed in this case become a target after he shifted to a fourth house, leaving one after another due to threats.



The story may not end after the verdict. It may have a new beginning. Babar was killed when he left his office for home near the Liaqatabad Police Station. He went after filing the story to be aired that night.



The story was aired, but it wasn’t the one he filed, but the one about his murder.

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Question Time: CID gets custody of four ‘target killers’ till May 3
Published: April 27, 2011
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Hit men remanded to CID custody by Judicial Magistrate West Abdul Hafeez Maitlo on Tuesday on request of police.

KARACHI:
The Crime Investigation Department’s (CID) police has been allowed by a court to question four alleged target killers till May 3.


According to the police, Liaquat Bangash alias Tension, Faizan, Arshad Khan and Azeem, have killed more than 100 people in Karachi. They were remanded to CID custody by Judicial Magistrate West Abdul Hafeez Maitlo on Tuesday.

In the request for remand, the police told the magistrate that the men have confessed to killing over 100 people. They belong to a political party and are part of a death squad with more than 200 members. The group operates in Gulistan-e-Jauhar and Rabia City. They were arrested from Pehlwan Goth along with three hand grenades, two Kalashnikov rifles, a repeater gun and one 8mm rifle. One of their accomplices, Liaquat Ali Yousufzai, escaped during the encounter. The physical custody of the accused is required to find out the whereabouts of their remaining accomplices, the police said.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 27th, 2011.

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ANP’s Liaquat Tension among 12 killed in city
By Our Correspondent
Published: June 18, 2012
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According to the police, Rangers were leading the raid and they went as backup. PHOTO: EXPRESS/RASHID AJMERI

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KARACHI:
On Sunday, the death toll climbed to 12, as Awami National Party’s (ANP) Liaquat Bangash alias Liaquat Tension died in an encounter with the authorities in Gulistan-e-Jauhar.


No one knows what happened as it was unclear if Bangash was shot, slipped or killed himself.

According to the police, Rangers were leading the raid and they went as backup. However, Rangers disagree and claim that they were not there and Bangash was killed in a police operation.

The autopsy report showed that Bangash’s bones were broken and it was possible that he jumped off a building.

Tension gripped the area as news of Bangash’s death spread. Party workers and supporters staged protests and opened fire in Safoora Goth, Pehlwan Goth, University Road, Lasbella, Patel Para and Old Sabzi Mandi. Three men were reportedly injured. The police arrested two suspects. A heavy contingent of Rangers was sent to monitor the area.

While speaking at a press conference, Crime Investigation Department AIG Ghulam Shabbir Sheikh said that Bangash jumped off a building in Rabiya City in a raid conducted by the Rangers. “When the raid was carried out there was a lot of firing,” he said. “We had cordoned off the area and Bangash was trying to escape. He jumped off a building and he died. By the time we got to the body some people started firing at us. Our men were also injured.” He added that Bangash had a criminal record and was involved in several target killing cases.

According to the AIG, the autopsy showed that the fall had broken Bangash’s ribcage.

Discussing new strategies, AIG Sheikh said that the police had received shoot on sight orders. “There are only 10 per cent criminals left in Karachi,” he said. “Around 80 per cent of the people are just common residents and the other 10 per cent is the police.”

The ANP Sindh general secretary Bashir Jan condemned the incident and called for a police probe. “We are not blaming anyone for the murder,” he said. “What the police is saying is wrong. There were torture marks on his body which shows that he was murdered.” He added that Bangash’s party membership was revoked over some administrative issues but he remained a ward president and was district security in-charge.

In an unrelated incident, the Baghdadi police found the bodies of two men identified as 31-year-old Asif Patni and Ayub, 30, in Lyari. They claimed that a group of men on four motorcycles brought Patni and Ayub to a nullah and opened fire at them. SHO Ghulam Nabi Afridi said that both men were cousins and had gone missing on Saturday. He added that Ayub and his cousins were supporters of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement.

The bodies of three unidentified men were found near the Super Highway, said the Gadap City police. According SP Jan Muhammad, they had collected the fingerprints to identify the men and trace their families. Initial investigation suggested that the suspects used two cars and had kidnapped the men before killing them. A similar incident happened in Memon Goth a week ago. The police believe that there is a link between the two cases. The Sohrab Goth police said that they found the bodies of a man and a woman from Akbar Farm House in Ayub Goth. In an unrelated incident a security guard identified as Syed Zaheer Abbas was shot dead. The police claimed that he was on his way to work in Kharadar. A six-year-old Hamza Khan was killed while eight-year-old Imran Khan was injured in Quaidabad. A woman identified as Rubina was murdered by her husband, said the Khokhrapar police. The husband was arrested and confessed to the murder. A policeman identified as Naseem was shot dead while his son was injured in Surjani Town.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 18th, 2012.


Question Time: CID gets custody of four ‘target killers’ till May 3 – The Express Tribune

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Wali Khan Babar’s Murder Mystery - by Mazhar Abbas (prominent crime reporter)


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Geo itself claims that wali was killed because he was covering the land mafia activities and not because of his ethnicity
 
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