PM Sharif telephones Kenyan president, discusses probe into Pakistani journalist’s assassination

In this picture taken on June 22, 2022, a top Pakistani news anchor Arshad Sharif speaks during an event on "Regime Change Conspiracy and Pakistan’s Destabilisation" in Islamabad. (AFP/File)
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Updated 21 February 2023
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PM Sharif telephones Kenyan president, discusses probe into Pakistani journalist’s assassination

  • Investigators say Arshad Sharif was willfully ‘targeted’ after he was shot by Kenya police outside Nairobi last year
  • PM tells Kenyan president his administration attaches ‘great importance’ to investigation into the journalist’s killing

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif spoke to Kenyan President William Ruto over the phone on Monday, requesting him to offer cooperation to Pakistani authorities investigating the killing of a senior journalist outside Nairobi last year.

Arshad Sharif, who worked with a local news channel as an analyst and talk show host, was shot by the police in the East African state on October 23. The Kenyan authorities described the incident as a case of “mistaken identity,” adding it took place when the journalist’s vehicle sped up and drove through a checkpoint.

However, an official fact-finding team, which visited Nairobi after Sharif’s assassination, raised questions about the police narrative while calling the slain journalist victim of a “planned and targeted assassination.” Pakistani investigators also maintained they were not getting enough cooperation from Kenyan officials which was impeding their probe.

“The Prime Minister emphasized that Pakistan attached great importance to the late Arshad Sharif’s case and requested for further cooperation from the Kenyan side during the course of investigation in bringing the matter to a closure for the family and people of Pakistan,” Radio Pakistan said while reporting the conversation between the two leaders.

“The Kenyan President assured Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif of full support and cooperation in the matter,” it added.

The slain Pakistani journalist started to criticize the incumbent administration of his country – along with its military establishment – after the ouster of former prime minister Imran Khan from power in a parliamentary no-confidence vote last April.

Subsequently, a number of criminal cases were registered against him in different districts, forcing him to leave Pakistan and travel to the United Arab Emirates in August before flying to Kenya.

Sharif’s killing not only sent shockwaves through the local media community but also made free speech groups around the world call for a fair and impartial probe into the murder.


Pakistan arrests Daesh suspects, including Afghan ‘mastermind,’ after Islamabad mosque attack

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Pakistan arrests Daesh suspects, including Afghan ‘mastermind,’ after Islamabad mosque attack

  • Interior minister says attack was planned and suicide bomber trained in neighboring Afghanistan
  • Suicide bombing targeted worshippers on Islamabad’s outskirts, killing 32 and wounding over 150

ISLAMABAD: A police officer was killed and four suspects, including an Afghan national who worked for Daesh and masterminded a deadly suicide bombing in the Pakistani capital a day earlier, were arrested in overnight raids, according to Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, who addressed a news conference on Saturday.

Officials have confirmed 32 deaths from Friday’s blast at the Qasr-e-Khadijatul Kubra mosque and imambargah in the Tarlai Kallan area on Islamabad’s outskirts, with more than 150 others injured.

The blast occurred during Friday prayers, when mosques around the country are packed with worshippers. A regional Daesh affiliate said one of its members had targeted the congregation by detonating an explosive vest.

“Immediately after the explosion, raids were carried out in Peshawar and Nowshera, and four of the facilitators [of the suicide bomber] were arrested,” Naqvi told the media in Islamabad. “The best thing that happened was that their mastermind, who is an Afghan affiliated with Daesh, was also apprehended.”

He confirmed that a Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police officer lost his life during a raid carried out at night, while a few others were also injured.

“The main mastermind is related to Daesh, and he is now under our custody,” he continued. “All the planning and training of this incident had been done by Daesh inside Afghanistan. These people are now with us, telling us all the details of how he [the bomber] was taken [to the neighboring country] and how he was trained there.”

Naqvi’s ministry also shared a brief statement on social media, saying that a breakthrough in the case was made through “technical and human intelligence” before coordinated raids were conducted to arrest the suspects.

“The nexus of terrorism under Afghan Taliban patronage remains a serious threat to regional peace,” it added.

The interior minister echoed the same concern while accusing India of bankrolling the militant operations against Pakistan.

“Now, you are taking the name of Daesh, or you are taking the name of Taliban,” he said while talking to journalists.

“They [the militants] are getting this funding from somewhere, someone is giving them this target.”

“I again want to tell you with clarity that all their funding is being given by India,” he added. “All their targets are being given by India.”

Islamabad has long accused Kabul of allowing its soil to be used by militant groups and New Delhi of backing their cross-border attacks against Pakistani civilians and security forces. However, the Afghan and Indian governments have consistently denied the allegations.

The police officer, who was killed in the shootout with militants in the northwestern district of Nowshera, was identified as Assistant Sub-Inspector Ejaz Khattak, Nowshera police spokesperson Turk Ali Shah told Arab News.

Friday’s mosque blast was the deadliest in Islamabad since a 2008 suicide bombing at the Marriott Hotel that killed 63 people and wounded more than 250. Last year in November, a suicide bomber struck outside a court in the capital, killing 12 people.

The latest attack comes as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government deals with a surge in militancy across Pakistan. Pakistani officials have said the attacker was a Pakistani national who had recently traveled to Afghanistan.