Submit your comments on this article |
Afghanistan/South Asia |
Multan explosion: Fugitives send police on a wild-goose chase |
2004-10-25 |
![]() Thirty-two-year-old Syed Irfan Ali, one of the car bombers serving a 14-day remanded will appear in court on November 4. Under the pressure of police questioning, Ali went to pieces and confessed the crime and also gave the names of his collaborators, including one being a Pasban-i-Islam activist. Ali also revealed the names of three of his accomplices, Ali Shah, from Rawalpindi, and Amjad Shah and Ghulam Abbas, from Bhakkar, admitting that they too were the Pasban-i-Islam zealots. It was later emerged from the questioning that their original plan had targeted leaders of the outlawed militant organisation, Millat-i-Islamia, by parking a car near the congregation, but instead they were forced to park it elsewhere when it was all over. Police sleuths squeezed more information out of Ali who admitted that he had arrived in Multan to plan terror attacks and stayed in an inn near the Gaddafi Square on October 2. Ali revealed that he had carried six fake identification cards, including a police service card, to escape being recognised. Akhtar Bharwana, who had reactivated the Pasban-i-Islam after the bombing in Sialkot, had left Iran for Pakistan last year and began contacting several activists of the Pasban-i-Islama and the Sipah-i-Sahaba, Ali told interrogating officers. |
Posted by:Fred |