Pakistan deploys intelligence officials to probe journalist Arshad Sharif's killing in Kenya
Slain Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif.
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The Pakistani government has sent
three intelligence officials to probe the mysterious killing of journalist Arshad Sharif who police claim to have
accidentally shot dead on Sunday night while pursuing an alleged stolen vehicle
in Kajiado County.
The three
are Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency Director Athar Waheed, the Deputy
Director-General of the Intelligence Bureau Omar Shahid Hamid, and Lt. Colonel Saad Ahmed.
According
to a notice from Pakistani’s Interior ministry dated Tuesday, October 26, the
team will travel to Kenya immediately and submit its report to the ministry.
"In pursuance of Prime Minister's office, the
following team is constituted to ascertain the facts related to the murder of
senior journalist Arshad Sharif," it reads
"The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Pakistan's
High Commission in Nairobi shall facilitate the aforementioned visit," the
notice adds.
The circumstances
under which Sharif was killed remains clouded in mystery, after it was established that the alleged
stolen vehicle that police were pursuing is a Mercedes Benz Sprinter van
registration number KDJ 700F while the one the Pakistani journalist was
travelling in is a Toyota Landcruiser V8 registration number KDJ 200M.
Prior
to the shooting, a man identified as Douglas Wainaina is said to have reported
to detectives at Pangani Police Station that he had left his car in a parking
at Ngara area with his son inside, but upon returning to where he had left the
vehicle, he could not find it.
According
to police, after tracking the vehicle they found that it was within Kiserian
area in Kajiado County prompting them to alert their counterparts.
The
Pakistani journalist would later be killed under a hail of bullets fired by GSU
officers who had mounted a roadblock in pursuit of the alleged stolen car.
In
what police termed as a case of mistaken identity, the GSU officers fired nine
bullets at the Toyota Landcruiser in which the journalist was travelling in
alongside his brother who was the driver.
And
in a surprise turn of events, the vehicle that was being traced would later be
found by police at a petrol station in Kiserian, with Mr. Wainaina’s
26-year-old son Duncan on the steering wheel.
On
Tuesday, the son was presented in court for driving without a license, but his
father who was the complainant through, lawyer Elisha Ndemo, withdrew the case.
Meanwhile,
the body of Sharif was airlifted to Pakistan for burial, with his family
calling for justice.


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