ISLAMABAD: Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has ‘rejected’ the findings of an investigation by the army into the arrest last month of Sharif’s son–in-law in Karachi, saying it was a failed attempt to ‘cover up’ the truth.
The army announced on Tuesday it had decided to remove officers from the paramilitary Rangers and the ISI spy agency who had acted “zealously” in arresting opposition leader Muhammad Safdar, a member of the opposition Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) party that Sharif heads.
“The inquiry report into the Karachi incident is a failed attempt to cover up the real facts,” Sharif said in a Twitter post. “This practice of sacrificing junior officers to save oneself is reprehensible. Report rejected!”
کراچی واقعے کی انکوائری رپورٹ اصل حقائق پر پردہ ڈالنے کی ناکام کوشش ہے۔ خود کو بچانے کے لئے جونیئر افسران کو قربان کرنے کی یہ روش قابلِ مذمت ہے۔ رپورٹ ریجیکٹڈ!
— Nawaz Sharif (@NawazSharifMNS) November 10, 2020
The probe, ordered by the country’s army chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, came after opposition politicians alleged that Sindh province’s top police official, Mushtaq Ahmed Mahar, had been abducted by paramilitary troops, taken to the office of a local ISI official, and coerced into signing an order to arrest.
Safdar was arrested by officials who barged into his hotel room, as seen in cellphone footage, the day after a protest by an opposition alliance in Karachi, capital of the southern province of Sindh. He was subsequently released on bail.
“Based on the recommendations of the Court of Inquiry, it has been decided to remove the concerned officers from their current assignments for further departmental proceedings and disposal at GHQ [general headquarters],” the military said in a statement.
It said the Rangers and ISI officers were “experienced enough to have acted more prudently and could have avoided creating an unwarranted situation that led to misunderstanding between the two state institutions.”
Last week, the PML-N and an alliance of opposition parties kicked off nationwide protests against the government of Prime Minister Imran Khan and accused the military of interference in Pakistani politics — an allegation the army vociferously denies. Safdar was among those leading the protests.
The Sindh government, under which the Sindh police operate, said it had not ordered Safdar’s arrest and that the police had been pressured into taking the action.
“The police chief’s phones were seized. He was taken to the sector commander’s office and asked to sign the arrest orders,” Maryam Nawaz, Safdar’s wife and Sharif’s daughter, told media. Mahar was reported to have been allowed to leave on Monday after signing the arrest order.
Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, whose Pakistan Peoples Party rules Sindh, publicly called for the army and intelligence chiefs to investigate the matter, saying the incident had “crossed a red line”.