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Pakistan - Daniel Pearl's Murder: Questions without Answers (long, detailed
South Asia Analysis Group ^ | April 17, 2002 | B. Raman

Posted on 04/19/2002 8:14:45 PM PDT by swarthyguy

The trial of Omar Sheikh and his associates in the Daniel Pearl kidnapping and murder case has begun in camera inside a Karachi jail. The media has been barred entry. However, Pakistani newspapers have reported that a representative of the US Consulate in Karachi has been allowed to be present during the trial.

The trial is being held under closely controlled conditions by the military regime in order to prevent Omar Sheikh from making any statements regarding his involvement in the attacks on the Jammu & Kashmir Legislative Assembly at Srinagar on October 1, 2001, on the Indian Parliament in New Delhi on December 13, 2001, and on the security personnel guarding the American Centre at Kolkata (Calcutta) on January 22, 2002, and about his links with Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda.

As a result, no authoritative account of what exactly he and the other accused told the ISI and the Police during their interrogation is available. However, the Police authorities of Karachi, angered over their repeated humiliation by the military regime, continue to embarrass the regime by leaking out copious details of what, according to them, he has been telling the Police ever since he was handed over to them on February 12, 2002, after having been kept in the ISI's custody for a week from February 5, 2002, when he voluntarily surrendered to the Home Secretary of Punjab,Brig. (retd) Ejaz Shah, who had served in the ISI and used to control the activities of the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM) and the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI).

While the military regime, including Gen.Pervez Musharraf himself, continue to blame the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JEM) led by Maulana Masood Azhar, which was banned by Musharraf on January 15, 2002, for the kidnapping and murder, the Police authorities insist that Pearl was kidnapped and killed not by the JEM, but by the HUJI and the HUM, with the former playing a more active role.

Musharraf has so far avoided banning the HUM and the HUJI despite the fact that the HUM, which, in its previous incarnation as the Harkat-ul-Ansar (HUA), was designated by the US State Department as a foreign terrorist organisation in October,1997, was a signatory of bin Laden's first fatwa of 1998 against the US and was a founding member of bin Laden's International Islamic Front For Jihad Against the USA and Israel. Both the HUM and the HUJI have been fighting against the coalition troops in Afghanistan and have sustained large casualties. Both these organisations, and particularly the HUJI, have a large number of supporters in the lower and middle levels of the Pakistan Army.

The Police suspicion on the HUJI and the HUM is based on the modus operandi (MO) followed by the kidnappers for killing Pearl---cutting open the throat and then beheading---which, according to them, is not used by any other terrorist organisation in the Jammu & Kashmir State of India, Pakistan or Afghanistan and on the known HUJI/HUM background of some of the dramatis personae.

Among the dramatis personae named by the Police as belonging to the HUJI/HUM are Omar Sheikh himself, Mansur Hasnain alias Imtiaz Siddiqui alias Hyder, Amjad Hussian Farooqui, Muhammad Hashim Qadir alias Arif and Mohammad Bashir. The Police quote Omar Sheikh as saying that Mansur Hasnain, a Pakistani Punjabi from the Toba Tek Singh District of Punjab, was the leader of the HUM group, which had hijacked an Indian Airlines plane to Kandahar in December,1999, to secure the release of Maulana Masood Azhar and Omar Sheikh.

According to the Police, Amjad Hussain Farooqui, also a Pakistani Punjabi, belongs to the HUJI. The "News" of February 16, 2002, quoted a Pakistani Police officer involved in the investigation as saying as follows on Farooqui: ": " He is a jehadi who has been mainly active in Afghanistan, but he lives in Karachi. The HUJI is the main Pakistani backer of the Taliban. About 1,800 of its 5,000 members were killed in northern Afghanistan during the US-led air strikes and the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance offensive. The HUJI members are believed to be part of a network of cells involved in the kidnapping. The operation was planned very intelligently, using cells unknown to each other."

It is said that Muhammad Hashim Qadir alias Arif, a resident of Bhawalpur, whom Pearl met first, belonged to the HUM. Pearl was keen to meet Mubarik Ali Shah Gilani, leader of the Jamaat-ul-Fuqra (JUF), a terrorist organisation based in the USA and the Caribbean with a large following among Afro-Americans. Two of Gilani's four wives are stated to be Afro-Americans. Pearl wanted to talk to him about Richard Reid, the so-called shoe bomber.

Mohammad Bashir is described as the man with whom Pearl was in touch through E-Mail from Mumbai (Bombay). Interestingly, Bashir reportedly used the E-Mail identity "Nobadmashi", meaning "No Hanky-panky". Some Police officers suspect that it was probably Omar Sheikh himself , who was in E-Mail contact with Pearl under the assumed name Mohammad Bashir.

Omar Sheikh has told the Police that the kidnappers operated in three groups. Omar himself and Arif won the confidence of Pearl. Mansur Hasnain and Amjad Hussain Farooqui kidnapped Pearl and kept him in custody and Omar, with the help of Adil Mohammad Sheikh, a member of the staff of the Special Branch of the Sindh Police, and his cousins Suleman Saquib and Fahad Nasim arranged for taking the photograph of Pearl in custody, having it scanned and sending the E-Mail with his photograph to the media and others making their demands. According to the Police, Saquib and Nasim belonged to the JEM, thereby indicating the possibility that the kidnapping and murder might have been jointly planned and carried out by the HUJI, the HUM and the JEM.

However, in his statement, Nasir, the driver of the taxi by which Pearl went to the Metropole Hotel in Karachi on January 23, 2002, has reportedly told the Police that he stopped his taxi near the hotel where a car with four persons was waiting. He has identified Omar as the person who got out of the car and took Pearl into the car. Pearl willingly sat in the car, thereby indicating that he did not suspect any trap.

Two prominent personalities from the USA, not belonging to the world of terrorists, who figure in the statement made to the Police by Khalid Khwaja, a retired Air Force officer who had worked in the ISI till 1988 and who was reportedly in touch with Osama bin Laden, are Mansur Ijaz, an American lobbyist of Pakistani origin, and James Woolsey, former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and a close personal friend of Ijaz.

Khwaja, who is related to Gilani, is reported to have told the Police that Ijaz and Woolsey had been in touch with him since September 11, 2001, and had sought his assistance for persuading Mulla Mohammad Omar, the Amir of the Taliban, to hand over bin Laden to the USA for trial. In the beginning of January,2002, Pearl had rung him up and sought his assistance for meeting Gilani. Pearl told him that Ijaz had recommended that he (Pearl) should contact him (Khwaja). Khwaja claimed that he had turned down Pearl's request.

According to the statement of Khwaja, he came to know after the murder of Pearl that the "Newsweek" was going to carry negative references to him (Khwaja) in its report on the murder. He immediately rang up Ijaz and conveyed his concern to him. Khwaja alleged that Ijaz rang him up later and told him that he had persuaded the "Newsweek" to tone down, if not delete the references to him.

Did Ijaz tell Khwaja that Pearl was Jewish and that his parents were Israeli nationals? Did the interest taken by Ijaz in helping Pearl meet well-informed people in the world of terrorism in Pakistan and his perceived proximity to Woolsey create fears in the minds of the terrorists and the ISI that Pearl was being used by the CIA to smoke out bin Laden and collect information about bin Laden's continuing contacts with the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment?

Important questions, but they remain without answers. The only thing one knows for certain is that the ISI tried hard to prevent the media from publishing the leakages from the Police about Ijaz and most papers complied with the ISI advisory.

In conclusion, some quotable quotes from the "News", a prestigious Pakistani daily, whose Editor was got sacked by Musharraf for publishing a report about the confessions of Omar Sheikh about his involvement in the terrorist incidents in India and who has since fled to the US fearing a threat to his life from the ISI:

* "A ranking police official said that while Omar's interrogation and supporting evidence were breaking the Police hopes of resolving the mysterious kidnapping saga, uninterrupted encouraging reports were being sent from Islamabad to President Pervez Musharraf in Washington."--The 'News" of February 15, 2002. * "Omar told his investigators that on February 5 he turned himself over to Brig (retd) Ejaz Shah, the Home Secretary of Punjab, who took him to some non-Police officials, who decided to hold back the announcement of his surrender till President Musharraf reached Washington on February 12. While Omar didn't hesitate for a minute in providing the Police an explicit account of his involvement in Pearl's abduction, Police investigators were surprised that he was not prepared to give any details about his week-long negotiations in Punjab with non-Police officials. Omar said: "I know people in the Government and they know me and my work, but it was not a factor in Pearl's kidnapping or my decision to turn myself over to the authorities."--The "News" of February 15, 2002.

* "Soon after surrendering before the Police in Rawalpindi, Pir Gilani had boasted about his contribution to several issues relating to national security and provided more than a dozen names of serving and retired officials for verification of his contribution to state security. Surprisingly, all main suspects in the Pearl kidnapping case are making similar claims."---The "News" of February 14, 2002.

* "Despite mounting evidence of Pearl's murder that has emerged soon after Sheikh Omar's decision to turn himself over to the authorities, top officials in Islamabad kept President Musharraf, who was in the USA, in the dark about the depressing developments in the case. Briefing the President on February 13, the officials said that they were sure that Pearl was alive and that they were about to arrest all the perpetrators of the kidnapping."---The "News" of February 26, 2002.

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.

(This is to be read in continuation of the writer's earlier articles titled "The Daniel Pearl's Case: Questions & Answers", "The Man Who Knows & Talks Too Much" and "Punishment Terrorism: Questions & Answers--Parts I to VI". All of them are available at www.saag.org )


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: musharraf; pakistan; pearl; southasialist; wsj
His first sentence is outdated as the trial has been postponed until a new judge is appointed.
Two prominent personalities from the USA, not belonging to the world of terrorists, who figure in the statement made to the Police by Khalid Khwaja, a retired Air Force officer who had worked in the ISI till 1988 and who was reportedly in touch with Osama bin Laden, are Mansur Ijaz, an American lobbyist of Pakistani origin, and James Woolsey, former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and a close personal friend of Ijaz.

Khwaja, who is related to Gilani, is reported to have told the Police that Ijaz and Woolsey had been in touch with him since September 11, 2001, and had sought his assistance for persuading Mulla Mohammad Omar, the Amir of the Taliban, to hand over bin Laden to the USA for trial. In the beginning of January,2002, Pearl had rung him up and sought his assistance for meeting Gilani. Pearl told him that Ijaz had recommended that he (Pearl) should contact him (Khwaja). Khwaja claimed that he had turned down Pearl's request.

According to the statement of Khwaja, he came to know after the murder of Pearl that the "Newsweek" was going to carry negative references to him (Khwaja) in its report on the murder. He immediately rang up Ijaz and conveyed his concern to him. Khwaja alleged that Ijaz rang him up later and told him that he had persuaded the "Newsweek" to tone down, if not delete the references to him.

Did Ijaz tell Khwaja that Pearl was Jewish and that his parents were Israeli nationals? Did the interest taken by Ijaz in helping Pearl meet well-informed people in the world of terrorism in Pakistan and his perceived proximity to Woolsey create fears in the minds of the terrorists and the ISI that Pearl was being used by the CIA to smoke out bin Laden and collect information about bin Laden's continuing contacts with the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment?



I remember seeing Ijaz on Fox with Rita Cosby talking about how he helped set up the Pearl meeting. Then he seemed to disappear from the airwaves even though he was Fox's resident analyst on SouthAsia affairs.

1 posted on 04/19/2002 8:14:45 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: *SouthAsia_list;NealLism
bump
2 posted on 04/19/2002 8:33:50 PM PDT by Free the USA
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To: swarthyguy; thinden; aristeides; rdavis84
Ijaz disappeared from the news like that ISI officer, Mohammed Ahmed....Who sent Atta all that money while assuring Armitage on 9/11 that he would rout the terrorists. Talk about playing a double game.

Musharraf kidded Albright that the Indians were behind Pearl's murder and she replied that "This is not a game." Did she know something the world at large did not?

I have more questions than the writer of this article who is playing softball....

Daniel Pearl, Mossad or inquiring mind, like Deadalus flew too close to the flame.

3 posted on 04/20/2002 5:51:43 AM PDT by rubbertramp
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To: swarthyguy
This story gets weirder and weirder all the time. Competition between Musharraf and his own police force, Musharraf's reluctance to ban groups like HUM and HUJI, and all these strange leaks.

The validity of all those leaks are suspect, due to the competition between the Pakistani police and Pakistan's president. However, I can't help but wonder if there is a link between the information gleaned by interrogating Omar and the sudden rash of arrests in Europe and the US.

4 posted on 04/20/2002 6:14:19 AM PDT by cake_crumb
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To: rubbertramp
Ijaz is the Sudanese living in America who revealed a couple of months ago the Clinton administration's refusal to accept the Sudanese government's attempts to turn bin Laden and his people over.
5 posted on 04/20/2002 8:19:42 AM PDT by aristeides
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To: aristeides
Ijaz holds a US passport. DOn't know if he was born here or son of immigrants or came to study here. He is a physicist by training and a invbanker/VC by trade.
6 posted on 04/20/2002 1:00:58 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: rubbertramp
Musharraf kidded Albright that the Indians --- Musharraf met Albright on his trip here? izzat Maddy Albright?
7 posted on 04/20/2002 1:02:15 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: cake_crumb
You're right. From the initial feeling of 'just' a kidnapping by islamatics, it seems to be turning into a real wide-ranging, shadowy affair with implications all the way to the top of the Pakistani military and religious hierarchy, not to mention some of the dirt spilling over onto US individuals as well. Shades of Abdul Haq's abortive venture into Talibanistan.
8 posted on 04/20/2002 1:07:21 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: aristeides
He described his background on Fox. He does have a Sudanese connection. He was involved in the financing/investment of that factory we bombed. And is apparently on close terms with a Sudanese businessman who owned/or was involved with the factory.
9 posted on 04/20/2002 1:09:50 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: swarthyguy; aristeides
From USA Today...2/10/02...David Albright, not Maddy (sorry).

India/Pakistan relations evidently are a game to Armitage, who gives odds to the traitor, Ahmed......

Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, in a recent interview, said he felt it was "65-35" that Musharraf would comply to a list of demands Armitage gave to Pakxistani intelligence chief Mahmoud Ahmed just after the attacks.

"I had some confidence that he would take it, but I did think the demands were so onerous that we basically said ... leave the keys on the table," Armitage said.

Doubts about Musharraf's intentions have not vanished. U.S. Officials are not certain that Musharraf has decided which road to take in the future.

His speech last month was made only after enormous U.S. and British pressure urging him to try to defuse a dangerous crisis between India and Pakistan, in which the two nuclear neighbors had massed thousands of troops on their respective borders.

A Dec. 13 attack on the Indian Parliament by terrorists with ties to Pakistani-based groups prompted the tensions.

Musharraf vowed to end any government tolerance for terrorism or groups that use violent means to fight for an end to Indian control of part of the Himalayan region of Kashmir — a disputed territory that has prompted three wars between Pakistan and India in the past half-century.

That speech delighted U.S. Officials But they say they will use Musharraf's visit here to continue to urge him, both publically and privately, to take more concrete actions to move Pakistan toward becoming a more moderate society that will not tolerate internal terrorism or extremism.

The Bush administration continues to have concerns "about how far Musharraf's reforms will go," says Radha Kumar, a South Asia expert at the Council on Foreign Relations. "Over there, what we haven't yet seen is a step by step set of actions ... a concerted follow-up action."

There is also concern about the effect the kidnapping of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in Pakistan last month will have on Musharraf's U.S. visit.

State Department officials initially praised Musharraf's assistance in looking for Pearl. But Musharraf's recent comments alleging that India might have played a role in Pearl's disappearance have deeply irritated U.S. Officials

Washington believes India had no role in Pearl's kidnapping and also worries that Musharraf's comments could re-ignite India-Pakistan tensions.

On relations between India and Pakistan, "It's important for the United States to tell Musharraf that this isn't a game," said David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Policy and a leading authority on Pakistan's nuclear program.

"I think he's done remarkable things. But I don't see it as finished by any means."

10 posted on 04/21/2002 12:15:20 PM PDT by rubbertramp
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To: rubbertramp
It's probably my imaginatin but is there a tone of wistfulness in Armitage when he says 65/35. "Leave the keys on the table", indeed almost as if that's what he(Armitage) would prefer.
11 posted on 04/21/2002 12:35:26 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: swarthyguy
My judgment of Mr. Armitage is that he doesn't have a wistful bone in his body. Do you think it is coincidence that the architect of 9/11, Ahmed, messenger of Mohammed Atta, just happened to be negotiating with Colin Powell's second hand man as the planes slammed into the WTC?

I think Daniel Pearl was locked onto this mystery....I would be if I were an investigative reporter.

12 posted on 04/22/2002 3:44:31 AM PDT by rubbertramp
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To: rubbertramp
I've heard that. Not sure what the implications are. But I do feel that Musharraf is up to his armpits in this affair. His cockiness on US trip especially his remarks about Pearl lead me to believe Musharraf knew EVERYTHING about the kidnapping, knew Pearl was dead when he arrived here and made the appropriate soothing comments to fool the state dept and the media.
13 posted on 04/22/2002 9:29:46 AM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: swarthyguy
If this link does not work, do a search on the name, Michel Chossudovsky.

www.iiie.net/Sept11/ISIRole.htm

14 posted on 04/23/2002 4:01:00 PM PDT by rubbertramp
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To: rubbertramp
I've read him on Swan's and emperor'snewclothes.
15 posted on 04/23/2002 9:31:42 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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