What's new

ISI ordered journalist's murder - More US Propaganda?

lem34

FULL MEMBER

New Recruit

Joined
Jun 3, 2011
Messages
4
Reaction score
0
White House officials now believe that Pakistan's spy agency ordered the killing of Pakistani investigative journalist Saleem Shahzad, confirming a Guardian allegation made three weeks ago.

Shahzad, a contributor to Asia Times Online, had written scathing reports about the infiltration of militants into Pakistan's military.

Classified intelligence obtained both before the disappearance of 40-year-old Shahzad on 29 May and after the discovery of his body showed that senior officials of the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) directed the attack.

It was done in order to silence criticism, two senior administration officials admitted when asked specifically about the existence of the intelligence.

A third senior US official said there was enough other intelligence and indicators immediately after Shahzad's death to conclude that the ISI had ordered the killing.

"Every indication is that this was a deliberate, targeted killing that was most likely meant to send shock waves through Pakistan's journalist community and civil society," said the official.

Shahzad was the 37th journalist killed in Pakistan since the 9/11 attacks, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Shahzad, whose waterlogged body was retrieved from a canal 60 miles from Islamabad, suffered 17 lacerated wounds delivered by a blunt instrument, a ruptured liver and two broken ribs.

The anger over his death followed unprecedented questioning in the media about the professionalism of the army and the ISI in the aftermath of the US raid that led to the killing of Osama Bin Laden.

Shahzad wrote articles that illuminated the relationship between the militants and the military.

Source: New York Times

How do these Basvtads get away with making these allegations without any proof. When we hear allegations that sept 11 was an inside job its a conspiracy theory. But their conspiracy theories get reported as fact. I dont know if any of you remember but Dr Kelly (inspector in iraq for wmd) died in the UK in mysteriouse circumstances I remember English papers saying oh it was an innocent suicide. Their double standards and hypocracy knows no bounds.
 
. .
I said before to some dude here, that if its a false allegation then relevant authorities should take action against the news paper. this is how simple it is to counter these allegations !
 
.
Death country

3487038733_Syed-Saleem-Shahzad_2.jpg

Victim of impunity: Saleem Shahzad
A Pakistani journalist-writer about how ISI agents tortured him


By Umar Cheema/Islamabad

Syed Saleem Shahzad paid with his life for exposing what Pakistani authorities did not want people to hear. An investigative reporter for Asia Times Online, he went missing a few days after writing an article that said al Qaeda elements had penetrated Pakistan’s navy and that a military crackdown on them had precipitated the May 22 terrorist attack on a Karachi naval base. Saleem’s body was found near Islamabad on May 30.

His killing has left Pakistani journalists in shock. I couldn’t sleep the night his death was confirmed. He had been tortured. It reminded me of that chilly night on September 4 when I was abducted by government agents. A thought that kept haunting me at Saleem’s funeral was: it could have been me. Fellow journalists told me I was lucky to get a lease on life that Saleem was denied.


The first person that came to my mind after my abduction was my two-year-old son, Adil. Journalists in Pakistan do not have an institutionalised social security system—those killed in the line of duty leave their families at the mercy of a weak economy.
My abductors came in police uniforms, to arrest me on a false charge of murder. They gagged and handcuffed me. I could not inform anybody of my whereabouts, not even my friends whom I had dropped off 15 minutes before. My cell phone was taken away.

I had written articles about the corrupt practices of high-ranking officials and criticising the army and intelligence agencies. When they were published, the Inter-Services Intelligence sent messages that were subtle threats. But abduction was the last thing I expected.


My captors took me to an abandoned house, stripped me and tortured me with a whip and wooden rod. I asked the man who was flogging me what my crime was. Another man answered: “Your reporting has upset the government.”

I did not apologise because I had committed no crime. I just prayed, “Oh God, why am I being punished?” The ringleader said: “If you can’t avoid rape, enjoy it.” He addressed me in abusive language. “Have you ever been tortured before?” he asked. “No,” I said. He replied: “These marks will stay with you forever, as a reminder never to defy the authorities.”

They tortured me for 25 minutes, shaved my head, eyebrows and moustache, and filmed and photographed my naked body. I was dumped about 100 miles from Islamabad and ?warned not to speak up.

Terrible months followed. I wouldn’t go jogging, fearing that I would be picked up again and never return. Now I live in in self-imposed house arrest. I have been chased a number of times after the incident. My son asks me questions about my attackers that I don’t answer. I don’t want to sow hatred in his mind.

I wondered if Saleem, too, was thinking about his children when he went missing. He had left Karachi, his hometown, after receiving death threats. He settled with his wife and three children in Islamabad, from where he went on reporting trips to tribal areas. Tahir Ali, a mutual friend, would ask him: “Don’t you feel scared in the tribal areas?” Saleem would smile: “Death could come even in Islamabad.”

Saleem’s killing is a terrifying reminder to Pakistani journalists. Five scribes have been killed in the country in 2011. Journalists are shot like stray dogs in Pakistan. They are easy targets because their assassins are people in power.

When Daniel Pearl was murdered by militants in Karachi in 2002, his case was prosecuted and four accomplices to the crime were sentenced. It happened only because he was an American. No organisation is powerful enough to get the government to bring Saleem’s killers to justice. Those who are speaking up for Saleem are being intimidated.

Pakistan’s journalists offer a ray of hope to its citizens. People trust them. But this trust will be eroded if journalists are bullied into walking away from the truth. News organisations around the world should join hands to seek justice for Saleem.
An award for investigative journalists should be instituted in his honour, as was done for Daniel Pearl. Immortalising Saleem will be the strongest message to his killers
.

Death country
 
.
But are we seeing any official denial? I see reason in this article. After all, Saleem Shahzad's reporting was clearly making a lot of people very uncomfortable in Pakistan.
 
.
But are we seeing any official denial? I see reason in this article. After all, Saleem Shahzad's reporting was clearly making a lot of people very uncomfortable in Pakistan.

Yup. There is:thinktank:


Linking ISI to Shahzad murder is an international conspiracy: Pakistan

Jul 5, 2011, 14:51 IST

Pakistan today said the fresh allegations by US officials that ISI ordered the killing of journalist Syed Saleem Shahzad were part of an "international conspiracy" to malign the country's security forces.


"There is an international conspiracy to malign the law enforcement agencies and security forces. (These allegations) are part of that conspiracy," information minister Firdous Ashiq Awan told reporters on the sidelines of a SAARC seminar.

She was responding to a question about a report in The New York Times that quoted unnamed US administration officials as saying that "new classified intelligence" showed that senior ISI officials directed the attack on Shahzad in an "effort to silence criticism".

Awan did not give any details of the "international conspiracy" that she referred to.

Referring to the current impasse in Pakistan-US relations, she said friendship between any two countries is a bilateral matter and "everybody safeguards their own interests".

She added: "Whenever there is a clash of interests, such things happen".

There had been "ups and downs" in relations between Pakistan and the US but "good relations are in the interest of both countries," she said.

To a question about the Shamsi airbase in southwest Pakistan that is believed to used by the US for drone flights, Awan said the Pakistan People's Party-led government has not given the airbase to "anyone" and there was no written agreement on the use of the facility by any party.


Linking ISI to Shahzad murder is an international conspiracy: Pakistan - World - DNA
 
.
If Saleem was close to making a big case on the establishments links with the taliban with concrete proof..
It was certain that the establishment would leave no holds barred to prevent anything from shaking up its already fragile relationship with the rest of the nation.
 
.
I don't see why the White House has to interfere in this, this is Pakistan's internal/domestic matter & is to be handled by the Supreme Court of Pakistan. Clearly exposes the motives of the White House.
 
.
If Saleem was close to making a big case on the establishments links with the taliban with concrete proof..
It was certain that the establishment would leave no holds barred to prevent anything from shaking up its already fragile relationship with the rest of the nation.

How is the journalist community seeing this incident? There are only two ways ahead: either these claims of ISI involvement is false and hence we could see business as usual or that these claims are true and the journalists in Pakistan are working to do something about it. Or a third way, that this incident has seriously crumbled their intentions to do any reports/exposes against the governments or its organizations.
 
.
Yup. There is:thinktank:


Linking ISI to Shahzad murder is an international conspiracy: Pakistan

Jul 5, 2011, 14:51 IST

Pakistan today said the fresh allegations by US officials that ISI ordered the killing of journalist Syed Saleem Shahzad were part of an "international conspiracy" to malign the country's security forces.


"There is an international conspiracy to malign the law enforcement agencies and security forces. (These allegations) are part of that conspiracy," information minister Firdous Ashiq Awan told reporters on the sidelines of a SAARC seminar.

She was responding to a question about a report in The New York Times that quoted unnamed US administration officials as saying that "new classified intelligence" showed that senior ISI officials directed the attack on Shahzad in an "effort to silence criticism".

Awan did not give any details of the "international conspiracy" that she referred to.

Referring to the current impasse in Pakistan-US relations, she said friendship between any two countries is a bilateral matter and "everybody safeguards their own interests".

She added: "Whenever there is a clash of interests, such things happen".

There had been "ups and downs" in relations between Pakistan and the US but "good relations are in the interest of both countries," she said.

To a question about the Shamsi airbase in southwest Pakistan that is believed to used by the US for drone flights, Awan said the Pakistan People's Party-led government has not given the airbase to "anyone" and there was no written agreement on the use of the facility by any party.


Linking ISI to Shahzad murder is an international conspiracy: Pakistan - World - DNA

Usual propaganda against ISI, White house has to consider CIA, US army war crimes and civilian torture and killings before making any allegation over security institution of Pakistan. killing of more than 80 civilians in drone strike in SWA is quite enough evidence to seal white house mouths.
 
.
Usual propaganda against ISI, White house has to consider CIA, US army war crimes and civilian torture and killings before making any allegation over security institution of Pakistan. killing of more than 80 civilians in drone strike in SWA is quite enough evidence to seal white house mouths.

For years They (CIA) Facilitated and nurtured ISI. That time they were good, now when they are asking ISI to delink herself from terror org, CIA became Evil...

Funny,very funny, What CIA will gain after defaming ISI???
 
.
For years They (CIA) Facilitated and nurtured ISI. That time they were good, now when they are asking ISI to delink herself from terror org, CIA became Evil...

Funny,very funny, What CIA will gain after defaming ISI???

A little simplistic, no? What did US get from defaming Saddam?

Nevertheless, US can get a scapegoat for its failure in Afghanistan, and perhaps pressure Pakistan to get after militants in North Waziristan.
 
.
No Escaping here.. ISI is responsible for the murder of Saleem Shehzad. The way he got killed is clear indication that ISI did that.. also Saleem Shahzad himself had stated that he is receiving warnings from ISI and he had asked his friends/family to know who are his murderers if he is ever murdered.. and guess what who he named.

This is bullshit to call this murder an international conspiracy.. the bad side of this organization must be mended and this practice must be stopped. ISI is a great organization.. its the best intelligence agency.. no doubt but this is where it needs to improve itself.. it must stop reacting against countrymen and they got to do it starting yesterday.
 
.
Courage and can-do leadership

I’m writing this on the flight home to Seattle from St. Louis, where I took part in the 34th annual APPNA convention. I gave a couple of talks and was given a Solidarity Award by the APPNA-affiliated American Pakistani Physicians for Justice & Democracy (APPJD) “for believing the world is one … and having the courage to prove it” – words that are among the kindest appreciations of my work that I’ve ever been honored with; which only underscores how humbled I feel to have been in the company of two fellow journalists whom circumstances have forced them to show much more courage than I’ve had any need to muster: Shehrbano Taseer and Umar Cheema.

Cheema is the journalist who was abducted and abused by Pakistani intelligence agents last September. He told a rapt APPNA audience about how, driving home after he was released, he asked himself whether he could remain in journalism and, if so, whether he could remain silent about what had been done to him. He said, in a compellingly matter-of-fact tone, that the answers to both questions were immediately obvious to him. So he does what he does and says what he says, because he can’t do or say otherwise. He told me that we have a long time to be silent after we’re dead, so as long as we’re alive we should act as if we’re alive.


Courage and can-do leadership | Blog | DAWN.COM

See the bolded part...ISI has been nailed
 
.
No Escaping here.. ISI is responsible for the murder of Saleem Shehzad. The way he got killed is clear indication that ISI did that.. also Saleem Shahzad himself had stated that he is receiving warnings from ISI and he had asked his friends/family to know who are his murderers if he is ever murdered.. and guess what who he named.

This is bullshit to call this murder an international conspiracy.. the bad side of this organization must be mended and this practice must be stopped. ISI is a great organization.. its the best intelligence agency.. no doubt but this is where it needs to improve itself.. it must stop reacting against countrymen and they got to do it starting yesterday.

It is too premature to come on conclusions, let the investigations complete. Anyone responsible should be trialed.

Do you think that person getting calls can identify the person calling, especially for a threat call?

By his verdict, it seems someone called like "This is so and so calling from ISI headquarters".......

calls can be from anyone.

The way he was picked was done by professional guys.... say some military guys....

But we have Mehran attacks, carried out by the professional guys as well.....
 
.
Back
Top Bottom