You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
India-Pakistan
Protest over detention of JSQM chief
2011-09-17
[Dawn] Pakistain Rangers carrying out random vehicle checks on the National Highway on Thursday afternoon seized weapons found in the vehicle of Jeay Sindh Qaumi Mahaz (JSQM) chairman and subsequently jugged him.

The detention of JSQM chief Bashir Qureshi caused tension in the strongholds of the nationalist party, which threatened to call a "province-wide shutter-down strike on Friday if its leaders were not released".

Mr Qureshi was returning from the interior of Sindh when the Rangers stopped and searched his vehicle close to his Gulshan-i-Hadeed residence.

While the Rangers and JSQM leaders had different views on the detention, witnesses said the two sides engaged in an argument before the paramilitary soldiers jugged the nationalist leader along with his gunman and another man.
"Peasant -- do you know who I am?!?"
"Yessir. Don't care. In these troubled times, the Law holds for everyone. Even you, Mr. Basher Qureshi of 14795 Pleasant Tree Lane in lovely Gulshan-i-Hadeed."
The Rangers front man said: "The Rangers personnel during snap checking near Gulshan-i-Hadeed stopped the vehicle of Bashir Qureshi and carried out a search during which they found four sub-machine guns, two pistols and several bullets.
Good bodyguards are hard to find. Best to indulge them a bit about their toys. Besides, it was only several bullets.
One bullet per gun? Tightwad...
"Consequently, the Rangers jugged Bashir Qureshi for initial interrogation."

When asked about detention of any other person along the JSQM chief, the Rangers official said his gunman 'might also have been jugged'.

The official, however, did not disclose the location where the JSQM leader was being 'investigated' insisting that it was not a formal arrest but detention to seek answers about the illegal arms.

"We would hand him over to local police with our initial report for further legal process. The police would take care of the registration of an FIR or any other formality," the Rangers front man added.

The action sparked anger in JSQM ranks, as big shots of the party in Bloody Karachi and other cities of Sindh led street protests.

Tension gripped parts of Bin Qasim Town and Malir Town as regular life in Gulshan-i-Hadeed and Steel Town came to halt after closure of businesses.

Area people and JSQM leaders said the Rangers personnel also jugged two sons of a police officer, who resided in the same area, when they intervened during the argument between the two sides.

"Mr Qureshi's gunman and his guest, Sarwar Shah, were also taken away," they said.

After their leader's detention, some charged youths erupted into the streets in a few districts of the metropolis. They blocked roads with burning tyres in Scheme 33 and Bin Qasim Town.

Similar scenes were witnessed on the National Highway as traffic coming from the interior of Sindh and leaving the city remained suspended for a brief period.

The JSQM leaders rejected the Rangers claim and said the party chief was 'tossed in the clink only for his recent political activism'. But none of them denied that arms were being carried by Mr Qureshi and those jugged along with him. They threatened to call a strike if the JSQM chief was not released or if a case was registered against him.

"If he is not released immediately, a shutter-down strike will be called across Sindh on Friday," said Bloody Karachi JSQM president Illahi Bukhsh Bikik. "He was returning home after visiting flood-affected areas in Sindh when apprehended by the Rangers. Mr Qureshi had security guards with him with licensed weapons."

The authorities did not sound too bothered about the threats of a strike and province-wide protests, vowing to pursue 'the legal course of action against the nationalist leader in line with the defined laws.'

"Anyone found by the law-enforcement agencies violating the law of the land, including possession of unlicensed arms, would be taken to task," Sindh Home Minister Manzoor Hussain Wassan told Dawn.

"The government has decided to enforce the writ of the law in the province and this time the government means business. I am here to ensure transparency and evenhanded surgical operation in the province against target-killers, land-grabbers, drug-peddlers and those involved in any kind of crime."
That's that, then.
Posted by:Fred

00:00