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India-Pakistan
Journalist Saleem Shahzad found dead near Islamabad
2011-06-01
[Dawn] A Pak journalist has been found dead near the capital Islamabad after writing about links between the Pak military and al Qaeda, officials said Tuesday.

Syed Saleem Shahzad, 40, worked for an Italian news agency and an online news site registered in Hong Kong. He went missing on Sunday after he left his home in the capital to take part in a television talk show, but never arrived.

Officials said his body was identified by relatives after being found near his car in Sarai Alamgir, 150 kilometres (93 miles) southeast of Islamabad.

"Relatives visited the cop shoppe and now they have identified the dead body. They said it is the body of journalist Saleem Shahzad," police official Zulfiqar Ali told AFP by telephone.

He disappeared two days after writing an investigative report in Asia Times Online that al Qaeda carried out last week's attack on a naval air base to avenge the arrest of naval officials tossed in the slammer on suspicion of al Qaeda links.

Ali Dayan Hasan, senior South Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch,
... dedicated to bitching about human rights violations around the world...
said Shahzad had complained about being threatened by Pakistain's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency.

"The other day he visited our office and informed us that ISI had threatened him. He told us that if anything happened to him, we should inform the media about the situation and threats," Hasan told AFP.

"We can form an opinion after the investigation and a court verdict, but... in the past the ISI has been involved in similar incidents."

The naval base attack on May 22 took 17 hours to repel. Officials said six Islamic fascisti destroyed two US-made surveillance aircraft and killed 10 security personnel in the standoff.

The country's umbrella Taliban faction grabbed credit, saying the attack was carried out to avenge the US killing of the late Osama bin Laden
... who went titzup one dark and stormy night...
in Pakistain, which reopened questions about complicity with Al-Qaeda within the military.

Pak Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani
... Pakistain's erstwhile current prime minister, whose occasional feats of mental gymnastics can be awe-inspiring ...
ordered an inquiry into the kidnapping and murder, pledging that the culprits would be "brought to book".

Shahzad's Italian employer Adnkronos (AKI) confirmed the death and earlier said it feared he had been kidnapped. He was also Pakistain bureau chief for Asia Times Online.

In 2006, he was kidnapped by the Taliban in Helmand in southern Afghanistan. Then, his kidnappers accused him of being a spy but set him free after seven days.

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistain had earlier Monday expressed alarm about Shahzad's disappearance and described as "exceedingly disturbing" reports that he might have been kidnapped by a state agency.

Hamza Ameer, a brother-in-law of Shahzad, told AFP that his car and identification papers had also been found.
Posted by:Fred

#4  ISI scripted Mumbai attack, Qaida cleared it: Shahzad book
The 26/11 terror attacks that killed 166 people and brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war was scripted by ISI officers and approved before its execution by al-Qaida commanders, according to a book just written by slain Pakistani journalist Syed Saleem Shahzad.

The 40-year-old reporter in his book titled `Inside Al-Qaeda and the Taleban -- beyond bin Laden and 9/11' describes the Mumbai plan as one pushed through by Ilyas Kashmiri, a key al-Qaida ally with wide links with the Pakistan defence establishment. Shahzad, who was an authority on terrorism in Afghanistan and the neighbourhood, says in the book that the plan was authored by the Inter-Services Intelligence officers and embraced and executed by Lashkar-e-Taiba.

"With Ilyas Kashmiri's immense expertise on Indian operations, he stunned the al-Qaeda leaders with the suggestion that expanding the war theatre was the only way to overcome the present impasse. He presented the suggestion of conducting such a massive operation in India as would bring India and Pakistan to war and with that all proposed operations against Al-Qaeda would be brought to a grinding halt. Al-Qaeda excitedly approved the attack-India proposal," Shahzad wrote in the book, excerpts of which were published in Karachi's The Dawn newspaper on Wednesday.
Posted by: Zebulon Thranter9685   2011-06-01 20:48  

#3  I wonder why they decided it was important to kill him now.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2011-06-01 19:14  

#2  Shazad was a damned good reporter. He knew his way around the terror structure in Pakistain.
Posted by: Fred   2011-06-01 16:45  

#1  He knew too much-RIP!
Posted by: Black Bart Phuling7750   2011-06-01 13:07  

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