PPP shielding BB's killers?

Every now and then we hear Rahman Baba claiming that he knows the killers and will disclose them on an “appropriate” time. The time hasn’t arrived and their tenure has ended. I was watching a program ‘Zabardast’ on Dawn News in which some jiyalas (in Pindi) were interviewed and almost all were unanimous in their belief that PPP was not serious in finding the culprits, and that they have made alliance with Qatil League. Contrary to our belief the alliance of PPP and Q League hasn’t been accepted by the hardcore jiyalas.

If there is truth in the following report its damning for the incumbent regime.

Benazir assassination probe report

** ISLAMABAD: The government has kept secret a ‘strongly worded’ letter of the United Nations written in reaction to Pakistan’s response to the UN inquiry report on Benazir Bhutto assassination, according to informed sources.**

The letter was written by Ambassador Heraldo Munoz, the head of a three-member inquiry commission on Benazir assassination, after then foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi sent a reply to the UN in July 2010 raising serious objections to the 60-page report released on April 15, 2010.

The UN letter is reported to have exposed the Pakistan Peoples Party’s intention of not revealing the names of perpetrators, planners, financiers and abettors of the fatal gun-and-bomb attack on the former prime minister after a public meeting outside Liaquat Bagh in Rawalpindi on Dec 27, 2007.

When contacted, Mr Qureshi confirmed that the UN letter was lying with the Foreign Office, but he declined to comment on it. “I think you should better ask the Foreign Office why the letter has so far not been made public,” said Mr Qureshi who had not shared the letter with the nation during his tenure as foreign minister.

But he regretted that even after a lapse of five years the PPP government had failed to expose the faces behind the assassination.

**“PPP leaders have been saying that they know her killers, but I don’t know why they are not making their names public,” he said.

**
Asked if any other person knew about the UN letter, Mr Qureshi said former ambassador to the UN Abdullah Hussain Haroon was in the country now and he was the most suitable person to comment on the issue.

**Dawn has learnt that Mr Haroon met UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and requested him not to release the substantive part of the letter. The request was accepted.
**

Several attempts were made to contact Mr Haroon, who lives in Karachi, but he was not available.

**Foreign Office spokesman Moazzam Khan expressed ignorance about the letter and said he would have to get information from relevant officers. He later told Dawn: “I tried my best to contact the relevant official, but he was not available.”
**

**The UN decided not to reopen the inquiry following Islamabad’s objection to its report.
**

Talking to journalists in Islamabad on Dec 24, 2010, Farhan Haq, associate spokesman for the UN secretary general, had said the world body would soon respond to Pakistan’s objections to the inquiry commission’s report. “Mr Ban Ki-moon had full confidence in the commission, and that he would soon respond to Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi’s letter in which he had raised objections over the probe concerning Ms Bhutto’s murder,” the spokesman said.

**Mr Qureshi’s letter stated that the UN commission’s observations about the Pakistan Army and the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) were not based on evidence. “Comments and observations about the army, ISI or the so-called establishment are only the opinions of the members of the commission. They do not represent authenticated determinations based on any fact or evidence,” Mr Qureshi wrote in the letter which was made public by the UN.

He was of the opinion that the report had a serious flaw because the commission had failed to approach third party states or provide some reliable information to unearth, if any, international linkages perpetrating, planning, financing or abetting Ms Bhutto’s assassination.
**

According to the terms of reference agreed with the government of Pakistan, the commission was to inquire into facts and circumstances of the assassination and to submit a report to the UN secretary general within six months. The duty of determining criminal responsibility for the assassination remains with the Pakistani authorities. After the initial six months, and at the request of the commission, the secretary general extended the commission’s term to March 31, 2010. Sources in the UN close to the author of the inquiry report, Heraldo Munoz, Chile’s former UN ambassador, told Dawn that he was not happy over Pakistan’s reaction to the report. He pointed out that it was for the first time in UN history that a government had requested an inquiry and even paid for it, but then rejected the findings.

“We were reluctant to conduct this inquiry. We undertook the job at the repeated requests of the Pakistan government which had expressed full confidence in the inquiry commission and even paid for it. Initially, everyone welcomed the report, including President Zardari’s office. And now this,” Mr Munzo was quoted as saying.

The report was not only opposed by the military establishment but also by sections in the civil side of the government.

Former ISPR director general Maj-Gen Athar Abbas had agreed that the military had some reservations over the report because it went beyond the mandate of the commission. “We have conveyed our reservations with special reference to security-related issues to the government and asked it to record protest with the UN,” he had said.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

Some reports suggest almost $100 million were wasted by the government in getting this investigated by the UN. There was no autopsy conducted on Benazir, and her body wasnt allowed to be exhumed. PPP had had the entire government machinery at its disposal for the past 5 years, and they havent been able to solve the case.
Wreaks of an internal conspiracy. Musharraf is just a convenient target for the likes of Bilawal and Zardari, as he isnt in the country.

But one wonders why Shah Mehmood Qureshi doesnt reveal the contents of the UN letter? Surely he has seen it.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

^ I think if Zardari being the husband is not serious in having the killers disclosed why should SMQ be concerned. Its clear that the government doesnt want to bring the perpetrators to justice, while on the other hand try to rack up sympathy votes again.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

The deputy PM of the PPP-led government was to be implicated in Benazir's murder case if her letter was given any importance by its party. The PPP's focus was more on her so-called will which donated the leadership to her son and husband.

Could someone please tell me who first coined the term of Qatil League? Government or the murderers — isn't it enough to show where actully the interest of the party lies?

Re: PPP shielding BB’s killers?

I wonder what the president has to hide.

Benazir Bhutto

**KARACHI: **Differences between President Asif Ali Zardari and Federal Interior Minister Rehman Malik seem to have increased after the former stopped the latter from revealing the Benazir Bhutto assassination investigation report before the Pakistan Peoples Party’s (PPP) Central Executive Committee (CEC).

Daily Express has learnt the president issued the instructions to Malik just hours before the commemorative PPP rally at Garhi Khuda Bux on Benazir’s fifth death anniversary. The interior minister had earlier announced intentions to reveal the report at the occasion.

**According to sources, Malik wanted to present the investigation report at the CEC meeting held on Benazir’s fifth death anniversary. He suggested PPP chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari begin his political career by revealing the report, they added.
**
Towards this end, Malik had been in Karachi over the past few days, meeting with the FIA team investigating Benazir’s assassination and other senior agency officials, along with personally overseeing the publication of the several hundred-page report. The interior minister had planned to distribute copies of the report among committee members and journalists at the CEC meeting.

President Zardari, however, rejected Malik’s suggestions. According to the sources, he directed the minister against presenting the report mere hours before the rally in Garhi Khuda Bux on Thursday.

They added that upon receiving the instructions, Malik directed officials concerned to stop the report’s publication, which had been in its final stages at the time.

It should be noted that the interior minister had earlier presented the report before the Sindh Assembly. Most of the report details have been reported by the media.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 29[SUP]th[/SUP], 2012.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

This is a good thread
discussing the real issues
I also felt that Billawal could not speak on this issue at Garhi Khuda Bakhs .

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

One great favour PPP could do to Benazir is to focus its energies on its policies and become a forward-looking party instead of a backward-leaning party. This is a high time that the party rebrands itself with new slogans and real roadmap to actualize them.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

Well, he wants to hide the muk-mukka deal he has with parties like PMLQ and MQM. Its obvious that the report would point fingers at the then ruling govt, as that was the obvious result of the limited access the UN was provided during its investigations. Out of all that govt, PPP has chosen to target Musharraf alone, as he is a convenient target, and a common enemy for them and PML-N. But the fact remains that that govt also included PML-Q and MQM. And if fingers are pointed towards them, then 1) PPP wont have their support in the next elections, and 2) these 2 parties will dish out dirt on PPP as well in response, as surely they must know a lot after having spent 5 years with them.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

^ If thats the case, it means that power is more important to him as compared to getting to the bottom of his wife's murder? Then why selective assault on judiciary when its clear that they are willing themselves to find and punish the culprits.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

Is there any way to fight a million guns ?
He is not a Bhutto from any side

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

^ at least he can fight the political parties accused for collusion though, but that would mean losing power which is maybe more important for him. This seems to be the last PPP government for a long time, so the end result has been zero for him politically in any case.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

Of course. Being in power has allowed him to effectively steal from the exchequer with impunity without anyone being able to touch him because of immunity. Being in power, and being Benazir's husband has allowed him to mask any involvement he may have had in her murder.

As for the judiciary, all ruling parties have the same attitude against the SC. When the SC rules against their opponents, it is a free and fair judiciary, and when it rules against them, it is incorrect, biased, and incomplete.

The past 5 years have been devoid of military pressure on the civilian setup, which is why we see a complete breakup of the society. The use of "military pressure, 'aamir', establishment, agencies etc" as an excuse is not valid any more, and its great, because sometimes you have to allow a company to fail before propping it back from the ground up, and thats what I feel is happening with Pakistan. We are technically failing, and getting to a point from where there is no way to go but up.

Re: PPP shielding BB's killers?

Agreed its good that military with all its temptations has stayed away from politics, and let the two parties expose each other. Before they'd use the sympathy card to convince masses that they were not allowed to govern. No excuse now for PPP, PMLQ and PMLN.

Re: PPP shielding BB’s killers?

A trial without an end | Pakistan | DAWN.COM

ISLAMABAD, Dec 26: Repeated and unending investigations, indifferent lawyers, a chaotic judicial system and a government that really didn’t care have all ensured that Benazir Bhutto murder trial is going nowhere.
Five different judges have headed the trial and the prosecution has filed eight separate challans since the proceeding started on February 29, 2008, which have also added to the delay as have the investigations by two different investigation teams.
Initially, the case seemed to move quickly.
Within a month of the assassination in 2007, the police on January 21, 2008, arrested Aitzaz Shah and Sher Zaman for their alleged involvement in the assassination. This led to the first challan that was filed by Punjab government, which was heading the investigations in the shape of the Joint Investigation Team (JIT).
Shortly afterwards, the police arrested Husnain Gul and Rafaqat Hussain, another two accused on February 7, 2008, from Rawalpindi and the second challan followed.
A week later on February 14, 2008, another accused Rasheed Ahmed alias Abdul Rasheed Turabi was arrested from Pir Wadhai in Rawalpindi.
By Feb 29, the trial had started; in November the ATC had framed the charges and in the summer of 2009, the ministry of interior appointed Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali as special prosecutor.
But in 2009 the PPP government decided to handle the investigations itself and the FIA formed a new JIT to oversee the investigations.
In August 2009 the then deputy attorney general and a member of the federal JIT requested the ATC to adjourn the case till the completion of its investigation.
This led to the first major delay. For the next years, there was no progress in the court case till October 10, 2010 when the next hearing was held.
In the meantime, a spate of new challans followed over the years as the circle of accused and suspects widened — dictated more by politics than hard-core evidence.
The third challan — and FIA’s first — was submitted on May 25, 2010, fourth on June 11, 2010, fifth on November 11, 2010, sixth on December 12, 2010, seventh on February 2, 2011, and the eighth and last was submitted to the court on June 6, 2012.
Musharraf was included in the challan during the FIA’s watch as were then Rawalpindi police chief Saud Aziz and SP Khurram Shahzad Haider who were responsible for the security arrangements for the jalsa on Dec 27.
All three of them were hauled up for their ‘involvement’ early last year – nearly three years after the PPP government was voted in.
Why the evidence to their ‘guilt’ was found as late as 2011 remains unclear.
This is also when Baitullah Mehsud and his accomplices, Ibadur Rehman, Abdullah alias Saddam, Faiz Mohammad, Ikramullah, Nasrullah and Nadir alias Qari Ismail, were nominated.
The court issued arrest warrants for former president Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf in Feb 2011, days after his name was added to the challan. By May the same year he was declared proclaimed offender and his property was confiscated in August.
Aziz and Haider too were arrested though they are now out on bail.
Since then, the rate of progress has been slow. Delay has also been caused in the time-honoured tradition of lawyers asking for adjournments or not turning up for the proceedings.
And when asked they blame their opponents.
Malik Jawad Khalid, counsel of two accused persons – Rafaqat and Hasnain Gul – told Dawn that the federal government and the prosecution agency were responsible for the delay.
According to him, the prosecution agency had named 132 witnesses. “It is very difficult to cross-examine such a huge number of witnesses.
So far, only 15 prosecution witnesses have recorded their statements and have been cross-examined by the defence counsel,” he added.
He, however, admitted that the defence counsel frequently missed the proceedings due to other engagements. “But the prosecutors also sought adjournment at least 10 to 15 times during the last two years,” he argued.
Chaudhry Zulfiqar Ali, special prosecutor of the FIA, said that in order to sum up the case he had shortlisted 40 prosecution witnesses out of 132 before commencement of trial in 2010.
He blamed the defence counsel for the delay.
Zulfiqar Ali said that during 2011 and 2010 he had moved three applications before the ATC court for conducting a day-to-day trial of BB murder case but that “the ATC rejected my applications”.
The last application in this regard was rejected by the ATC on June 22, 2012.
Ali then challenged the ATC decision in the Lahore High Court, Rawalpindi bench, in July and on December 17, the LHC division bench finally directed the ATC for the expeditious trial of the case.
It remains to be seen, if this actually galvanises the court and the two sides into action.

Re: PPP shielding BB’s killers?

http://dawn.com/2012/12/27/five-years-on-the-mystery-continues-playing-politics-with-her-death/

RAWALPINDI, Dec 26: A hazy day in Rawalpindi, there was little to indicate that within hours, it would be five years since Benazir Bhutto, PPP’s chairman and the first woman prime minister of Pakistan, was assassinated on this very road.

Only a handful of PPP activists could be spotted on Liaquat Road where she had lost her life. They were busy putting up banners and billboards, ignored by the visitors to the park, who walked past. The lack of energy and exuberance was all the more marked when compared to the buzz of activity on Murree road, nearby. At Murree Road, a horde of construction workers were feverishly working on a flyover being built at the behest of the Punjab government.

The members of the People’s Youth Organisation (PYO), supervised by Central Executive Committee (CEC) member Qazi Sultan Ahmad, appeared lacklustre in contrast.

They appeared lost and orphaned. And their words simply strengthened this perception.

Mohammad Shakil said as he unrolled a banner, “Every year, we hope that on this day we will not have to hear the mocking tone of our political adversaries who make fun of the PPP because it has not been able to arrest the murderers of BB, despite being in power.”

But this wish, which is shared by most PPP workers and activists, remains unfulfilled. In fact, the anger of the people is intensifying at what is being perceived as the apathy of the party leadership that does little but spouts meaningless words.

Since December 30, 2007, when Benazir Bhutto’s widower and current President Asif Ali Zardari first spoke about her death, the PPP leadership has done everything to further confound the mystery surrounding the murder of the former prime minister in a gun and bomb attack on Dec 27, 2007.

Mr Zardari during the press conference on that sombre day repeatedly referred to his late wife’s email which she wrote to Mark Siegel. The email was an indictment of then president, Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf, as she stated that he wasn’t serious about her security. Mr Zardari termed the email as her ‘dying declaration’ nominating her potential killers.

In the same breath Mr Zardari dubbed PML-Q as Qatil league. By doing so he was only following in the footsteps of his wife who had accused Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi along with former ISI chief Lt-Gen Hameed Gul and then IB chief Ejaz Shah of being guilty of planning her death.

How sincere he was is evident from the fact that now the PML-Q is coalition partner and Elahi the deputy prime minister of the PPP-led government.

But he is not the only one who has used Ms Bhutto’s death to score political points. His hyperactive, Interior Minister, Rehman Malik, is also well known for his wild pronouncements, on the dramatic discoveries in the investigations of the BB murder case.

Addressing a gathering of Pakistan People’s Party workers in Chitral earlier this month, he announced that he would reveal the names of the murderers of Benazir Bhutto and other little-known details of her assassination in his upcoming book.

No-one knows what additional information the interior minister had gathered which he wanted to disclose through his book.

If that was not enough he told Dawn in mid December that he would “expose some new faces involved in the assassination of Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto when we unveil the JIT report on her death anniversary.”

But earlier this year, in a special briefing to the Sindh Assembly on February 21, he had squarely blamed former president Gen Musharraf for the murder of Ms Bhutto.

“Both Pervez Musharraf and militants based in Fata considered Benazir Bhutto a threat for themselves as she was a strong proponent of democracy and democratic values,” Mr Malik was quoted as saying in media reports.

In his enthusiasm, Mr Malik has also taken a different line than his boss as to why Ms Bhutto’s post-mortem was not carried out after her death. He told the provincial assembly that the post-mortem wasn’t carried out on the instructions of police officer on duty. Mr Zardari during the press conference on Dec 30, 2007, had said: “I have lived long enough in Pakistan to know how these post-mortems are done. I know these forensics reports are useless. We know what the wound is and how it was caused”, explaining why he had rejected the government’s suggestion for a post-mortem.

Other PPP leaders have also issued similar self-contradictory statements.

Qamar Zaman Kaira, federal Minister for Information and chief spokesperson for the party, on Jan 3, 2011, during a rally in his hometown of Gujrat said the investigation into Benazir Bhutto’s assassination had entered its final phase. He added that it was a matter of days before the people involved in the crime would be exposed.

But Mr Kaira has also been heard, on other occasions, saying that the main accused in the case — Baitullah Mehsud — has been killed, whereas the others are behind bars, waiting for trial.

Even former home minister of Sindh, Dr Zulfiqar Mirza, who has expressed his disgust for what he calls Mr Malik’s disrespect for the truth has proved to be no different than Mr Malik on the issue of Ms Bhutto’s assassination.

On the eve of third death anniversary of Ms Bhutto in December 2010, he said he knew who the killers were. But despite having fallen out with his party leadership he never provided any further details.

No wonder then as people gather at Garhi Khuda Bakhsh to commemorate her fifth death anniversary there will be excitement in the air, across Pakistan.

Hot rhetoric is expected as are mysterious pronouncements. Perhaps some also expect some hint or declaration about the upcoming election.

But even the most die-hard jiyala will not expect any truth about the assassins who cut short the life of one of Pakistan’s greatest leaders.

The PPP is no longer focused on its recent past.

With additional reporting by Syed Irfan Raza