Why Was
Prominent Pakistani Journalist Arshad Sharif Shot By Police In Nairobi On
October 23rd?
Mossad, the
renowned Israeli Secret Service organisation, is well known for eliminating
enemies of the Jewish State and its people in audacious and imaginative covert
operations abroad. Usually, the targets for retribution are blood-soaked
individuals, responsible for the murder of a large number of Jews themselves.
Its not always bullets. Poisoned toothpaste, honey-traps, robot operated
machine guns which are remote-controlled, old-fashioned infiltration, have all
been used. What is always evident is
deep research, intelligence gathering, flawless execution, with rare exceptions
to the contrary.
However,
Mossad has never been known to assassinate a Jew abroad, whatever be the
provocation.
Mossad quite
often claims responsibility after the fact, even though such action violates
sovereignty laws in other countries, but not always, particularly when ongoing
strategic security interests are involved. The repeated elimination of Iranian
nuclear scientists and mysterious explosions that retard Iran’s nuclear weapons
programme are cases in point. When it does own up, working in concert with
other secret agencies of the Government of Israel, it is to issue a warning to
others engaged in action against Jewish interests, and that of the Jewish
State.
In Pakistan,
going against the military establishment is considered anathema. Any civilian
government or institution that takes a critical position against the military
is censured at a minimum. Usually
personnel have to resign, and if the provocation is serious enough, the
government in power will generally fall, as in the case of Imran Khan’s PTI
government most recently. For journalists to do anything of the sort is asking
for brutal retaliation.
In this
case, apart from supporting the Imran Khan government and suggesting the Army
had caused its dismissal, Sharif was in the midst of creating an expose on
corruption in the former Nawaz Sharif government, the corruption of Army chief
General Bajwa and others, called ‘Behind the doors’, when he was killed with a
shot to the back of the head on a dark dirt road near Nairobi at 10 at night. General
Bajwa is about to retire and be replaced by a new chief of Army Staff sometime
in November 2022. Rumours include a possible relocation by him to the United
States.
That Sharif’s
body was taken to Chiromo Mortuary, 78 km away from the alleged site of the
killing, is just one of many strange facts and circumstances concerning this
shooting.
The shooting
of Pakistani TV journalist Arshad Sharif in Nairobi by Kenyan police is
officially trotted out as a case of ‘mistaken identity’. But did the Kenyan
police actually do it? Does it have the hand of Pakistan’s deadly ISI behind it,
as is widely alleged?
There is a wealth of confusing and
contradictory reportage on the killing. One report says the Toyota Land Cruiser
Sharif was travelling in, was being shadowed by a car full of Pakistani
operatives, a ‘killer squad’ for several days prior, according to former
governor of Nairobi, Mike Sonko. This gang of assassins were out to kill Sharif
because he was preparing yet another Kenya based expose on people in the
present Pakistani government and its deep state, involving a money-laundering
syndicate that also owns car showrooms in Nairobi and Mombasa. The Pakistan military and ISI are reported to
have intensive connections with Islamic jihadi groups and war lords in Africa,
including Kenya.
Allegations
of the Kenya Police acting frequently as death squads for hire have also been
rife. Al Jazeera has produced a documentary on the subject called ‘Inside Kenya’s
Death Squads’, describing its cold-blooded murders on government orders, or for
money.
Another
report says gunshots were fired at the police at a police check point from
inside the car Sharif was travelling in, presumably by his host Ahmed, injuring
a policeman on the hand, prompting it to return fire.
It is ironic
to note that only Sharif was killed with a clean shot to the back of the head,
while all others in his car were unharmed. This despite nine shots being fired,
four towards the back left of the car, and five towards the back right of the
car including one that punctured the right rear tyre. The Land Cruiser was
allegedly trying to flee, but from whom? Was it the Kenyan police check post/hit
squad for hire, or the Pakistani assassins stalking it?
The
ostensible reason for the police asking Sharif’s car to stop was a reported
carjacking, involving also the abduction of a child. But the reported missing
car was a Mercedes, and not a Toyota.
Common sense
and Kenyan journalistic comments suggest a carjacking does not seem grave
enough for the police to have opened fire on civilians, just because Ahmed’s
Toyota flouted its order to stop. And then again, why would it not stop? And if
Ahmed opened fire first, why was he not shot at?
Yet another
report suggests the fatal gunshot was fired from within Sharif’s car. Hmm.
Sharif was
being hosted by a family of Pakistani nationals at a farmhouse near Nairobi, at
a place called Westlands. He had come to Kenya from the UAE where he had gone
in August with an in-between possible visit to Britain.
This farm at
Westlands is allegedly owned by a three-star ISI general from Pakistan. Arshad Sharif and Kurram Ahmed, from the host
family, had spent that final Sunday afternoon at Ammodump@Kwenia, an
entertainment complex with a shooting range, popular with Pakistani gun
enthusiasts. It is located on a feeder road in Kamukuru , 85 km south of
Nairobi. The duo left the entertainment complex for Nairobi at about 8 pm local
time, presumably for Westlands, where they were staying.
On Twitter,
Kenyan investigative journalist Brian Obuya said the fatal shot that killed
Sharif was ‘fired with precision through the rear mirror of the car’.
Whatever be the truth of Sharif’s actual
killing, let us look at the back-story. First, his recent anti-establishment
stance. Sharif was known to be close to Imran Khan and his ousted Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf
Party (PTI), that is trying hard to make a come-back to power via mass
movements and marches. Sharif also gave himself the proverbial ‘kiss of death’
by being critical of the Pakistan military at the same time. Fearing an attack
on his life, Sharif fled abroad to Dubai
and then to Kenya recently, presumably after losing his job in August, only to
meet his fate there on Sunday 23rd October 2022.
Prime
Minister Shehbaz Sharif of Pakistan, who was attending a conference in Saudi
Arabia, expressed grief, shock, and horror in a tweet on October 24th
and requested Kenyan President William Ruto over the telephone to expedite the
repatriation of the body to Pakistan, and a thorough investigation into the
killing. The funeral took place on Thursday the 27th and attracted
huge crowds in Pakistan.
Imran Khan,
who said he had advised Sharif to leave the country after he was accused of
sedition in May, a case being filed against him on 22May, called Sharif’s shooting a ‘targeted killing’
for his criticism of the power establishment.
Khan also called him a ‘martyr’, but perhaps as some critics have said, as an
investigative journalist, Sharif should not have drawn so close to a particular
political party, out-of-power and in vigorous opposition.
Sharif, who
was 49, was an anchor on Pakistan’s ARY TV network. Though he was earlier close
to the Pakistan military, he had been vocally critical of late. So much so,
that ARY was forced off-air for a spell because it had allowed him to use its
platform to spread anti-military sentiment.
Sharif had
been briefly arrested by the Pakistan Police for sedition after an interview
with an Imran Khan aide from PTI called Dr Shahbaz Gill. He was eventually
fired by ARY in August 2022, after serving as host and anchor for eight years
at the channel. The Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA),
meanwhile had termed some of the comments in the Shahbaz Gill interview as
incitement for the ’armed forces to revolt’.
The respected
Dawn newspaper of Pakistan reported that Inter-Services-Public Relations (ISPR)
Director General (DG) Major General
Babar Iftikhar, accompanied by ISI Chief Lt. Gen. Nadeem Ahmed Anjum making a
rare public appearance at a press conference in Rawalpindi, said the Pakistani
military has requested the civilian government to conduct a ‘high level
investigation ‘ into the ‘accidental’ killing of Sharif.
Prime
Minister Shehbaz Sharif has since announced a thorough judicial investigation
and review into the matter.
There is a
strenuous effort towards plausible deniability amongst all the authorities in
Pakistan. They are keen that America does not see the Sharif murder or mishap
as another Jamal Khashoggi moment.
However,
this kind of thing is not new in Pakistan. In recent times, Saleem Shehzad was
killed on May 3oth, 2011. Hamid Mir was shot six times and wounded by gunmen on April 19, 2014. Matiullah
Jan was kidnapped from a busy street in Islamabad on April 20, 2021. Asad Toor,
his ribs broken, was brutally tortured by unidentified persons on May 25th,
2021. Absar Alam was shot but not killed. Judicial commissions investigating
these attacks on jounalists have nor handed in any report known to the public.
Both the US
and the UN want this death thoroughly investigated, though neither are
generating any heat over it. It is, as if, coming from Pakistan, run by its all-powerful
military, and known internationally as terrorist central, no one is truly
surprised.
(1,561
words)
October
31st, 2022
For:
Firstpost/News18.com
Gautam
Mukherjee
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