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Prosecutor in Musharraf case gunned down on his way to court
Miam Khursheed/REUTERS - Security officials inspect the damaged car in which prosecutor Chaudhry Zulfikar was travelling when he came under attack by unidentified gunmen in Islamabad on Friday. Zulfikar, the prosecutor investigating the 2007 assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, was shot dead in the attack, police said
By Richard Leiby,
Published: May 3
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan In an attack that shocked this usually sedate capital, gunmen on Friday shot to death the Pakistani governments top prosecutor in a case accusing former military ruler Pervez Musharraf of involvement in the 2007 assassination of ex-prime minister Benazir Bhutto, police said.
The gunmen opened fire on Chaudhry Zulfikars car as he was leaving his home en route to an anti-terrorism court in nearby Rawalpindi for trial proceedings in the Bhutto case. The shooters used either a taxi or motorbike in the morning attack, police said in conflicting reports.
The assailants escaped, and authorities said the motive for the attack was unknown.
The police are not aware of any threats being received by the state prosecutor, said Irshad Abro, a senior police official.
Zulfikars slaying was a rare episode of violence in the capital, which has so far seen none of the bombings or other attacks against secular politicians waged by the Taliban. The group has warned people not to vote in the May 11 national election which will bring the first transfer of power between elected governments in Pakistans 65-year history saying it is against Islamic law.
In January 2011, Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab province, was assassinated by his bodyguard at an upscale market. In May 2011, an Islamabad-based investigative reporter, Saleem Shahzad, disappeared; his body was found about 100 miles away in a still-unsolved killing that U.S. officials linked to the Pakistani intelligence service.
Musharraf, who ruled Pakistan for nine years before going into self-exile in 2008, returned in March in an ultimately futile bid to run for prime minister. He has been under house arrest for more than two weeks, facing allegations in various cases linked to his tenure.
In the one unfolding in Rawalpindi, prosecutors allege that Musharraf was culpable in Bhuttos murder for not providing her with enough security. He has denied the allegations.
At the time, Musharrafs government blamed the Taliban for the fatal attack on Bhutto, a two-time prime minister. Bhuttos son, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who leads the Pakistan Peoples Party, has alleged that Musharraf was behind it.
Proceedings in the case had been bogged down for years and resumed only recently with Musharrafs return.
Speculation was rife Friday that Zulfikar was killed to disrupt that case, but, as is common in Pakistan, that was just one conspiracy theory among many.
The head of the prosecution service is going to be leading any number of sensitive cases at any one time, said Salman Akram Raja, a noted lawyer.Although reluctant to engage in what he called pure speculation, Raja offered this: Maybe it was to send a signal that whoever was behind Benazirs assassination, that they are still around.
Zulfikar also headed the prosecution of Pakistani militants accused in the 2008 three-day siege in Mumbai that killed 166 people, including six U.S. citizens.
Indian and U.S. authorities blamed that attack on Lashkar-e-Taiba, a Pakistan-based group they allege is headed by Lahore religious scholar and cleric Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, who has denied involvement.
The trial of the seven men suspected in the Mumbai attacks has dragged on for years as well. Pakistani courts have repeatedly refused to accept evidence from Indian authorities. Saeed continues to preach freely and has the backing of the Pakistani government and courts, which both say there is no credible evidence tying him to the Mumbai operation.
Pakistans main military intelligence agency helped create Lashkar-e-Taiba to wage attacks on Indian forces in the disputed territory of Kashmir, but it now disavows any control over or connection to the group.
Musharraf, a retired four-star general who also served as president, is facing treason charges in a Supreme Court case connected to the dismissal and arrest of scores of senior judges as part of his bid to hold on to power late in his tenure.
Fridays assassination of the prosecutor took place in a middle-class neighborhood. Police said Zulfikar suffered multiple gunshot wounds to the chest and head and died on the way to a hospital. His bodyguard was severely injured.
A woman at the scene was killed when hit by Zulfikars car after it came under fire from the attackers, police said.
Prosecutor in Musharraf case gunned down on his way to court - The Washington Post