KARACHI: Rao Anwar, the absconding police officer who was arrested outside the apex court on Wednesday morning, was shifted here to Karachi, where he will be questioned by a joint interrogation team (JIT) and tried in an anti-terrorism court.
Anwar arrived in Karachi on a Shaheen Air flight from Islamabad, along with Additional IG Sindh, Aftab Pathan.
“Getting justice in Pakistan seems to be happening. I hope I will get justice, and also those who have faced similar injustice at the hands of people like Rao Anwar,” said Hajji Muhammad Khan, father of the young Pashtun Naqeebullah Mehsud, who was killed in a police raid in Karachi.
“My expectations of the supreme court seem about to be fulfilled,” Mehsud’s father told.
“We strived to get justice within the limits of the law. It has been proved that justice may be delayed but can’t be permanently denied,” said Saif Ur Rehman, leader of the Pashtun Jirga, whose protest forced authorities to register the case against Anwar.
“Today’s proceedings have raised our hopes of getting justice. We say thanks to our institutions, who delayed but eventually sided with the oppressed against injustice,” Mehsud told Arab News.
“Anwar hasn’t only defaced Pakistan but also caused damage to the image of the peaceful Pashtun community by posing them as Taliban militants,” Mehsud maintained.
Meanwhile, a JIT headed by Additional Inspector General of Sindh Police Aftab Pathan and comprising DIG Zulfiqar Larak, DIG Azad Khan, DIG Waliullah Dal and SSP Dr. Rizwan, was formed.
Earlier the court rejected Anwar’s request to form a JIT from intelligence agencies.
Anwar, former Senior Superintendent Police (SSP) of Malir, Karachi, is accused of killing the aspiring model Naqeebullah Mehsud in a fake encounter.
Anwar had claimed Naqeebullah was an active member of the PakistanTaliban, but subsequently evidence began to pile up against the police team involved in his killing.
After the incident, a formal inquiry was launched against Anwar. As pressure mounted on him, he went underground and even made a botched attempt to fly out of Pakistan.
He also wrote a few letters to the Supreme Court after it began the suo motu hearing on Naqeebullah’s murder, telling the judges that the system was heavily stacked against him and he was not hoping to get any justice in the case.
In response, the country’s top court granted him some relief, asking him to surrender and let the law take its course.
The court was also willing to reconstitute the JIT looking into Naqeebullah’s killing since the absconding police officer had voiced concern over its composition.
Despite these steps, Anwar did not make an appearance before the court, forcing judges to take action against him by asking the relevant authorities to freeze his accounts.
In a surprise move on Wednesday, however, the absconding police officer came to the court in a white car. He was clad in a black dress and wore a medical mask to cover his face.
Anwar’s lawyer told the chief justice that his client had “surrendered” himself and wanted protective bail.
However, the Supreme Court turned down the request and ordered law enforcement authorities to lock up the former SSP.
The country’s top judge expressed his displeasure, saying that Anwar had continued to run away from legal procedures even when the court had guaranteed that he would get a fair hearing and justice would be dispensed in the case.
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