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India-Pakistan
Dr Usman, Arshad Mehmood executed in Faisalabad
2014-12-19
[DAWN] Aqeel alias Dr Usman and Arshad Mehmood have been executed in Faisalabad on Friday night, in the first capital punishment carried out in the country since Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif lifted the moratorium on the death penalty, sources said.

Usman a former soldier of the army’s medical corps, was executed in relation to an attack on the headquarters of the Pakistan Army in 2009 in Rawalpindi. Arshad Mehmood, was executed for an assassination attempt on former military ruler, General (retd.) Pervez Musharraf.

Security had been tightened at Faisalabad's central and district prisons ahead of the executions.

The black warrant for Dr Usman was signed by Army Chief General Raheel Sharif late on Thursday night.

The prime minister had lifted the moratorium a day after terrorists attacked Peshawar's Army Public School, killing 141 people, most of them children.

Eleven soldiers had lost their lives in the Oct 10, 2009 attack when 10 heavily armed militants wearing suicide vests stormed the army's General Headquarter (GHQ) holding off commandos for hours.

Dr Usman, who was caught injured during the Oct 10 raid on the army headquarters by militants, was sentenced to death in 2011 by a military court which had awarded prison terms to others in the GHQ attack case.

A retired soldier, Imran Siddiq, was awarded life imprisonment in the case at the time whereas three civilians — Khaliqur Rehman, Mohammad Usman and Wajid Mehmood — were given life terms while two others, Mohammad Adnan and Tahir Shafiq (both civilians), were given eight and seven years jail sentence respectively.

Apart from Dr Usman, who was caught during the attack, other serviceman and five civilians were found guilty of abetment.

Their trial by the military court, which was headed by a brigadier, had lasted over five months and had taken place at an undisclosed location.

Mehmood, who was a trooper, was among the five sentenced to be hanged for their role in an Al Qaeda-inspired assassination attempt on Musharraf’s life in late 2003.

Musharraf, who was in power at the time, narrowly escaped the bid when two suicide car bombers rammed his motorcade on Dec 25, 2003, in Rawalpindi. Fifteen people were killed in that attack.

It was the second attempt on Musharraf’s life that month, and several soldiers, air force personnel and militants were arrested after the two attacks.

Mehmood and civilians Zubair Ahmed, Rashid Bhatti, Rashid Qureshi, Ghulam Sarwar and Akhlaque Ahmed were convicted in the case.
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India-Pakistan
GHQ attack case: Military court rejects appeals of ex-army men
2012-12-08
[Dawn] A military court of appeal on Friday, by rejecting appeals of convicted ex-army men in the GHQ attack case, maintained the punishments awarded in August last year, DawnNews reported.

The military court in Rawalpindi had sentenced to death a former soldier, Aqeel alias Dr Usman, over an attack in 2009 on the Pakistain Army Headquarters (GHQ) and awarded prison terms to the seven others.

The former soldier of the army's medical corps was given the maximum punishment of death while another retired soldier, Imran Siddiq, was awarded life imprisonment.

Three civilians -- Khaliqur Rehman, Mohammad Usman and Wajid Mehmood -- were given life terms while two others, Mohammad Adnan and Tahir Shafiq (both civilians), got eight and seven years jail sentence respectively.

Aqeel was caught injured during the Oct 10, 2009 raid on GHQ by snuffies while the other serviceman and five civilians were found guilty of abetment.

Eleven soldiers had bit the dust in the attack when 10 heavily armed hard boys, wearing boom jackets, stormed the GHQ, holding off commandos for hours.
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India-Pakistan
Ex-armyman gets death for GHQ attack
2011-08-14
[Dawn] A military court in Rawalpindi has sentenced to death a former soldier over an attack in 2009 on the Pakistain Army Headquarters (GHQ) and awarded prison terms to the others.

The sentences, according to a military source, were handed down to the convicts almost a fort-night ago. However,
facts are stubborn; statistics are more pliable...
they became public after the relatives of some of the convicts visited them at Adiala jail.

Aqeel alias Dr Usman, a former soldier of the army's medical corps, was given the maximum punishment of death while another retired soldier, Imran Siddiq, was awarded life imprisonment.

Three civilians -- Khaliqur Rehman, Mohammad Usman and Wajid Mehmood -- were given life terms while two others, Mohammad Adnan and Tahir Shafiq (both civilians), got eight and seven years jail sentence respectively.

"One former soldier, Aqeel, alias Dr Usman was awarded the death sentence while one of his accomplices, also an ex-soldier, and three civilians were sentenced to life," a Western news agency quoted a military official as saying on Saturday.

Aqeel was caught injured during the Oct 10 raid on GHQ by bully boyz while the other serviceman and five civilians were found guilty of abetment.

The trial by the military court, which was headed by a brigadier, lasted over five months at Qazi's guesthouse an undisclosed location.

The Inter-Service Public Relations (ISPR) would not confirm or deny the sentencing by the military court.

Eleven soldiers had bit the dust in the embarrassing Oct 10, 2009, attack when 10 heavily armed beturbanned goons, wearing boom jackets, stormed the GHQ, holding off commandos for hours.

A lawyer for one of the accused said his client intended to challenge the sentence before a military court of appeal.

Colonel (R) Inamur Rehman, a defence lawyer for Wajid Ali -- one of the convicts -- said he would apply for a copy of the verdict on Monday.

Under article 199, sub article 3, of the Constitution, verdicts handed down by military courts cannot be challenged in a high court. However,
Switzerland makes more than cheese...
a Supreme Court ruling provides that those convicted by a military court can petition a high court if they could prove that the verdict was mala fide.

Col Inam, after getting a copy of the decision, would try to see if he could establish that the military court acted with mala fide intentions.

Under the normal process, a mercy petition could be filed with the Chief of Army Staff. If the appeal is rejected, the convicts can then approach the President.

Col Inam said that under military rules, the convicts can appeal within 40 days of an order passed by a military court.

Agencies add: The Taliban had grabbed credit for the day-long siege.

Troops ultimately fought off the attackers and freed 39 hostages, but 23 people were killed, including 11 troops, three hostages and nine attackers.
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India-Pakistan
 Sri Lankan team attack mystery deepens
2009-09-09
By Amir Mir
LAHORE: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani's September 6 statement that Sri Lankan elements had been involved in the March 3, 2009 attack on the visiting cricket team in Lahore has further deepened the mystery as to who had actually masterminded the bloody incident.

Talking to newsmen in the federal capital on Sunday, Gilani in fact quoted Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, saying terrorist elements in his country might be involved in the 3/3 Lankan cricket team attack. The brutal assault on the world of sports since the attack on Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics in 1972 killed eight people, including six policemen and injured six Sri Lankan players. As the attack grabbed breaking news slot worldwide, the pundits were quick to point out similarity between the Lahore and Mumbai attacks ñ an armed group of people swooping on pre-determined targets with chilling ruthlessness. However, Lahore differed from Mumbai in one major respect ñ not a single assailant was killed or nabbed by the Pakistani authorities. In the absence of an Ajmal Kasab, there began breathless speculations about the identity of those who orchestrated the attack on the Lankan team.

From India's Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) to militant groups (like the Lashkar-e-Taiba and the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi) to the Sri Lankan Tamil avengers to al-Qaeda-Taliban ñ their complicity in the 3/3 attack was discussed threadbare. Yet, by evening, RAW had already been blamed for masterminding the 3/3 to avenge the 26/11. A senior PPP leader and Sindh Assembly member Nabeel Gabool told Geo TV network almost immediately after the assault: "The Lahore incident was a replay of the 26/11 Mumbai attack and most likely carried out by Indian intelligence agents. Those investigating the bloody attack have already recovered some India-made weapons as well as food items from the crime scene."

Interior Minister Rehman Malik, too, didn't rule out a foreign hand and the Pakistani foreign office thought the assault was perpetrated by the enemies of Pakistan-Lankan friendship. No prizes for guessing who they were referring to. A day after the Lahore attack, the national press had flashed a warning letter by the Crime Investigation Department (CID) of the Punjab police, citing in a clandestine communiquÈ on January 22, 2009 an alleged Indian plan to target the Lankan cricket team. The CID report claimed that the RAW planned to carry out the attack on the route the Sri Lankan team was to take from their hotel to the ground. At the same time, however, there were those in Pakistan who were not willing to buy the official spin on the Indian involvement in the Lahore terrorist attack. Former information minister Sherry Rehman was the first one to have officially denied any government knowledge of an Indian involvement. On March 6, 2009, the Pakistani media reported that police and intelligence officials had categorically ruled out involvement of any Indian intelligence agency as well as the LTTE and were zeroing in on the Lashkar-e-Taiba. Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama was quoted as saying by the international media: "From our point of view, there is no Indian involvement. India has helped us in our counterterrorist efforts. I don't see a need for India to target the Sri Lankan cricket team."

Punjab Governor Salmaan Taseer hinted at the involvement of the Lashkar-e-Taiba. He had told the media people after visiting the site of the attack: "It is the same pattern, the same terrorists who attacked Mumbai." His statement was followed by stories in the national press stating that the attack could have been an attempt by the LeT militants to hijack the bus carrying the visiting cricket team to demand in return the release of Lashkar-e-Taiba chief operational commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi.

On June 17, 2009, almost 15 weeks after the Liberty terrorist attacks, the Lahore police claimed having broken a Punjabi Taliban network, besides arresting a man seen on CCTV footages, shooting down a traffic warden. Lahore Capital City Police Officer (CCPO) Pervez Rathore told a news conference that the suspect, identified as Mohammad Zubair alias Nek Mohammad, coming from Dera Ghazi Khan district, was arrested from Madina colony in Lahore and was among the seven terrorists who had attacked the Sri Lankan cricket team with an aim to kidnap them. He described Aqeel alias Dr Usman of Kahota as the mastermind of the attack who had finalised the plan at Tauhid hostel on Wahdat road, Lahore and a rented house in Madina colony near Cavalry ground, Lahore. Zubair told the police that he was working as a waiter at a small hotel in Rawalpindi when a man Saifullah convinced him for waging Jihad.

Almost a month later, on July 10, 2009, an investigation report submitted by the interior ministry to the National Assembly standing committee on sports and culture claimed that the main objective of the attack on the Sri Lankan team was to hijack the bus carrying the players and pressurise the government to release some arrested terrorists of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi including Akram Lahori and Malik Ishaq. Almost a week later, the national press reported on July 22, 2009 that Pakistan has handed over to India comprehensive evidence of the Indian involvement in a number of terrorist acts on its soil, including the attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team. These reports said a dossier containing proofs of India's involvement in subversive activities in Pakistan was handed over by Prime Minister Gilani to his Indian counterpart Dr Singh during their meeting at Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt.

And last but not the least, Prime Minister Gilani has spoken about the Lankan connection in the 3/3 attacks. The million dollar question remains: Who was the actual mastermind of the 3/3 attack?
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