Pak ISI Agent Dropped From Probe Into Death Of Journalist Killed In Kenya

Arshad Sharif, 49, a former reporter and TV anchor with Pakistan's ARY TV, and known for his proximity to former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, had fled to Kenya after he was charged of sedition and peddling "anti-state" narrative by Pakistan's security agencies earlier this year.

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Senior Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif was recently shot dead in Kenya. (File Photo)
Islamabad:

The Pakistan government on Wednesday reconstituted a panel probing the killing of senior journalist Arshad Sharif in Kenya by dropping an ISI agent from the team, days after he was shot dead by the Nairobi police.

Arshad Sharif, 49, a former reporter and TV anchor with Pakistan's ARY TV, and known for his proximity to former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, had fled to Kenya after he was charged of sedition and peddling "anti-state" narrative by Pakistan's security agencies earlier this year.

The journalist was shot dead at a police checkpoint at an hour's distance from Nairobi on Sunday night. The Kenyan police later said it was a case of "mistaken identity" during a search for a similar car involved in a child abduction case.

On Wednesday, Pakistan's Interior Ministry removed a representative of the Inter-Service Intelligence or ISI from the list of officials who will be part of the team that will ascertain facts in the killing of Sharif from the Kenyan Police and relevant authorities.

The ministry removed ISI Lt Col Saad Ahmed's name hours after it had issued an earlier notification stating the names of three officials part of the high-profile team, according to a revised notification.

The two-member team, which includes Director/DIG Police, FIA Athar Waheed and Deputy Director General Intelligence Bureau Omar Shahid Hamid, will submit its report to the Interior Division.

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According to the notification, the team will leave for Kenya immediately and noted that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Pakistan's High Commission in Nairobi will facilitate the team during the visit.

The move comes just a day after former Prime Minister Imran Khan on Tuesday claimed that Sharif was killed in a targeted attack. Khan said that he had advised Sharif to leave the country in view of the threats to his life.

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Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday announced that his government will form a three-member judicial commission to probe the journalist's killing.

Meanwhile, the body of Arshad Sharif arrived in Islamabad early Wednesday morning. Local TV channel footage showed a large number of people gathered at the Islamabad airport, including members of the media fraternity and leaders from Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party.

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"My Arshad is back, but in [a] coffin," his wife Javeria Siddique said on Twitter. She also shared a video showing the coffin.

The tragic killing reverberated internationally and the US State Department Spokesperson Ned Price said that the United States was "deeply saddened" by Sharif's death and demanded a probe.

Earlier, Pakistan's army had asked the government to carry out a high-level probe.

Military spokesperson Major General Babar Iftikhar reiterated the demand in an interview with 24 News on Tuesday. "I think a thorough investigation needs to be conducted to tackle these things. I believe that the probe should not just be into these things (killing) but also on why Arshad Sharif had to leave Pakistan," he said.
 

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(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)