Intelligence agencies, including ISI, investigating assault of Lahore TikToker — minister

Human rights activists hold placards as they march during a protest against a gang rape of a woman, in Lahore on September 12, 2020. (AFP/File)
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Updated 21 August 2021
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Intelligence agencies, including ISI, investigating assault of Lahore TikToker — minister

  • Woman says was filming video with friends on August 14 when 400 people attacked the group near Minar-e-Pakistan monument
  • Punjab Information Minister Chohan says investigation underway using geofencing, NADRA data and joint work by military and civilian authorities

LAHORE: Punjab Information Minister Fayazul Hassan Chohan said on Friday all civilian and military intelligence agencies, including Pakistan’s main spy agency, the ISI, were investigating the August 14 public assault of a woman near the Minar-e-Pakistan monument in the central city of Lahore.

The incident, for which 24 people have been arrested so far, sent shock waves across the country after videos of a mob attacking and sexually assaulting the woman, Ayesha Akram, were shared online this week.

“The very scientific way in which we are identifying and carrying out investigations, all civilian and military [intelligence] agencies are involved in it,” Chohan told Arab News in a phone interview. “Both agencies have worked in a positive, effective and scientific way to carry out the investigation, which is why all these people are being arrested and more will be arrested in the future.”

Chohan explained that several of the arrested suspects, as well as others that authorities were still hunting, had been identified using data from the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA), and through geofencing, in which location data on the internet is trawled to identify people who were in an area when a crime was committed.

He said the ISI, police, NADRA, and the Punjab Forensics Science Agency were all involved in the investigation, adding that the Punjab government had “shown results.”

“20-25 culprits have been arrested, the police officers who committed negligence, DIG [Deputy Inspector General] Operations has been changed, SSP [Senior Superintendent of Police] Operations has been suspended, DSP [Deputy Superintendent of Police],” Chohan said as he listed several officials who had been removed over negligence.

Human rights minister Shireen Mazari said more arrests were expected today, Friday.

 

 

The Pakistani military’s media wing declined to comment on Chohan’s statement that military spy agencies were involved in the investigation. Akram, the survivor of the attack, promised Arab News an interview but then declined, citing the “sensitivity” of the case.

In the police report for the incident, which was reported to Lahore’s Lari Adda police station, Akram said she was assaulted, manhandled and robbed by hundreds of men in broad daylight. She said the mob picked her up and tossed her around for hours, and calls to the police emergency helpline at 630pm were not answered until 930pm.

“I was stripped and my clothes were torn off me,” she said in the police report, adding that gold ornaments, cash and her mobile phone were also stolen. “There was no body part of me left without bruises.”

The Greater Iqbal Park is home to the Minar-e-Pakistan monument, built to commemorate the first official call for a separate and independent homeland for the Muslims of British India by the All-India Muslim League Party in 1940. Pakistan became an independent country seven years later, on August 14. Each year, thousands of people flock to the monument to mark independence day.

When questioned about security arrangements at the park on a day as busy as August 14, SSP Investigations Mansoor Awan said high ranking officials had already been suspended for negligence.

“More details will come out tomorrow (Saturday) once the new officials take charge,” he said. “We will find out about the lack in contingency plan and why they [victims] were not responded to on time despite calls.”

Nighat Dad, a lawyer and rights activist, said the onus was now on the state to protect women and restore their confidence.

“The power men hold in all spaces both private and public speaks to a failure of society at every level. It is becoming unsustainable for women and gender minorities to live in this society,” Dad said. “If this continues, and the state fails to intervene, women will lose confidence in any institutions and system, they will stop coming forward. The onus is on the state to respond to this crisis with leadership and vision.”


Four policemen, seven militants killed in separate clashes in northwest Pakistan

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Four policemen, seven militants killed in separate clashes in northwest Pakistan

  • Pre-dawn assault on Bannu police post repelled, three militants killed
  • Four officers killed in ambush during operation in Dera Ismail Khan

PESHAWAR: Seven militants and four policemen, including a senior officer, were killed in two separate security engagements in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, police officials said on Wednesday.

The incidents occurred in the Bannu and Dera Ismail Khan districts bordering Afghanistan, areas that have seen a resurgence of militant attacks in recent years, particularly by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which frequently targets police posts and security forces.

Islamabad has repeatedly accused the Afghan Taliban authorities of allowing militant groups, including the TTP to operate from Afghan territory and stage cross-border attacks, an allegation Kabul denies. The dispute has strained ties between the two neighbors and fueled security tensions along the frontier.

In the first incident, three militants were killed after police repelled an overnight assault on the Khunia Khel police post in Bannu district, which borders Afghanistan.

Aamir Khan, spokesperson for the Regional Police Officer in Bannu, said heavily armed militants launched a pre-dawn attack in what appeared to be an attempt to overrun the facility. Police personnel stationed at the post returned fire.

“The officers displayed exceptional valor and professionalism, putting up fierce resistance against the terrorists and compelling them to withdraw,” Khan told Arab News by phone.

He said three militants were killed and nine others wounded in the clash, while one police officer sustained minor injuries. One of the slain attackers was identified as commander Umar Azam, also known as Khazmati, while another was named as Shahidullah. The identity of the third militant was being confirmed, he added.

Hours later, militants launched what police described as coordinated retaliatory attacks on the Ahmadzai Police Station and the Fateh Khel police post. Security personnel repelled both assaults without further casualties, according to Khan.

DERA ISMAIL KHAN 

In a separate operation in the Panyala area of Dera Ismail Khan district, four militants and four police officers were killed during a security operation and subsequent ambush, district police spokesperson Yaqoob Khan said.

The operation was launched after intelligence reports about militant presence in the area. It was led by senior officers, including the Superintendent of Police (SP) for the Counter-Terrorism Department, the SP of Paharpur, Deputy Superintendents of Police from Paharpur and Panyala, and several Station House Officers.

Police surrounded suspected militants during the operation. As officers were returning, they were ambushed from nearby forested terrain, triggering an exchange of gunfire.

“Four police officers were martyred and four terrorists were killed in the ensuing firefight,” Khan said.

Among those killed was Station House Officer Faheem Mumtaz Khan. SP Paharpur Iqbal Baloch, DSP Paharpur Muhammad Adnan and two other officers were injured and shifted to hospital for treatment.

Authorities cordoned off the area and launched a search operation in nearby forests.

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi condemned the attack in Dera Ismail Khan and expressed “deep sorrow and grief” over the deaths of the police personnel.

“Such cowardly acts of terrorism cannot undermine the morale of the police, nor will attempts to sabotage peace in the province succeed,” he added, calling for a coordinated national strategy to eliminate militancy.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s attacks.