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May
12, Karachi: It was a day that even Karachi with its legacy of bloodletting
will not soon forget. Perhaps never before had militants armed with
deadly weapons been given such carte blanche to murder their political
opponents at will. Nor had the law-enforcement agencies so deliberately
turned their backs on the carnage taking place around them.
The
events of that fateful day were set in motion when the suspended
chief justice, Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, accepted an invitation
to address the Karachi Bar Association on May 12. In response, Karachi's
ruling party, Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), the Sindh government's
coalition partner, declared it would hold a rally on the same day
in support of President Musharraf. In fact, the chief justice was
asked to cancel his proposed trip. "No one will be allowed
to do anything in Karachi. This country belongs to everyone, but
Karachi belongs to us," proclaimed Nawab Mirza, leader of the
MQM in the National Assembly.
Official
sources later revealed that when the chief justice remained undeterred,
the provincial government called a meeting of senior officials and
instructed them that even if the judge arrived in Karachi, he should
at no cost be allowed to leave the airport and reach the Sindh High
Court building, where he was scheduled to address members of the
bar. Similarly, no one from the legal profession was to be allowed
to reach the venue.
When
Sindh Chief Secretary Shakil Durrani learnt of these plans, he wrote
a letter to the officers concerned that such a course of action
was not only in contempt of the High Court's orders to provide safe
passage to the visiting judge, but it could adversely impact the
law and order situation.
According
to Sindh government insiders, a meeting was subsequently convened,
which was attended by the Sindh Advisor for Home Affairs, Waseem
Akhtar, and other senior government officials including the provincial
home secretary. An official source privy to this meeting revealed
that when Shakil Durrani reiterated his position, one of his junior
officers interrupted him to say that they should follow the instructions
of the home adviser, adding, "Sir, you should be able to understand
from where these orders have been issued."
The
consequences of this approach soon became clear. On May 12, with
the police and security forces deployed for the occasion standing
by as silent spectators, marauding gangs of activists belonging
to the MQM blocked all the roads leading to the airport, torched
vehicles and seized control of the city. When convoys of workers
belonging to the opposition parties, on their way to the airport
to welcome the visiting judge, tried to circumvent the barriers
put up by the Sindh administration the night before, they were set
upon by militants at several places. Gunmen brazenly displaying
tri-color MQM flags tore off on motorbikes after firing G-3, Uzi
and AK-47 rifles from the overhead bridges located at Shahrah-e-Faisal
- the city's main artery to the airport.
Those who managed to escape the gunmen were targeted by militants
who had taken up positions on the rooftops of some of the apartment
buildings along the thoroughfare. Many died where they fell. Assailed
by gunfire from all directions, their companions were able to do
little more than plead for help while the injured bled to death
in front of their eyes. Ambulances, operated by private NGOs and
local philanthropists, found it virtually impossible to reach the
wounded. In fact, at least one Edhi ambulance driver who was attempting
to take the wounded to the hospital was shot dead along with his
passengers. Overall, there were armed ambushes at 16 different locations
across the city with the major incidents taking place on Shahrah-e-Faisal.
Irshad
Channa, a local with no affiliation to any political party but who
wanted to see the "festivity" in the city which was all
set to greet the judge, said that he joined the PPP and ANP-led
rally near Sheraton hotel. According to him, when their motorcade
reached near Aisha Bawany School on Shahrah-e-Faisal, they found
the road blocked. "Suddenly, heavy firing broke out from all
directions," he recalled. "There was firing from the school,
from the Sea Breeze apartments located across the road and from
the flyover."
Although
the firing continued for over two hours, no one from the administration
showed up to rescue the participants of the rally, many of whom
were injured in the hail of bullets. "And this, despite the
fact that there's a Corps Commander's office located right there,
the ISI office is across the road and a police station is located
hardly a stone's throw away," says Channa.
Mohammed
Moosa, another Karachiite who was trapped near Malir Halt, also
located on Shahrah-e-Faisal, stated that heavy firing started just
a few yards away from the headquarters of the Frontier Corps (FC)
police, but no one emerged from inside the building to help those
under fire. At least 12 people were killed and scores of others
injured at the Malir halt signal.
Across town, when members of the legal profession turned into the
road leading to the Sindh High Court, they were intercepted by youth
with pistols tucked into their jeans. These men, mainly belonging
to the MQM and standing guard on the road, checked every individual's
identity to prevent members of the Sindh High Court bar from reaching
their destination. Those lawyers who refused to comply were beaten
black and blue. Many of those who managed to escape their assailants
and make it to the court, later showed their injuries to the mediamen
present to cover the scheduled event.
By late evening, when the guns had finally fallen silent and the
smoke from the torched vehicles had dissipated in the skies over
Karachi, the death toll stood at 42, and the number of injured was
over 150.
In
the following days, condemnation of the provincial government in
general and the MQM in particular reached fever-pitch as the public
and political parties alike held it responsible for what had transpired
on May 12.
Sindh
Advisor for Home Affairs Waseem Akhtar admitted that he had given
instructions to the administration to block roads using containers,
buses and trucks, but claimed he did so to prevent the two rallies
from coming face to face which, in his view, could have resulted
in even more fatalities. However, he offered no satisfactory explanation
as to why the 15,000 policemen - including 3000 called in from interior
Sindh - the FC or the para-military troops were either missing from
the strife-torn areas or else took no action against the armed youth.
According to him, the law-enforcement personnel had been asked to
remain unarmed on the day in question.
However,
some of the police officers deployed from interior Sindh said that
when they reported for duty "to maintain law and order,"
they were asked by their superiors to surrender their personal weapons,
which they normally carry with them as protection against the scores
of enemies they might have made in the course of their work.
Interestingly,
the security plan originally drawn up by the Sindh Police had identified
sensitive areas between the airport and the Sindh High Court, and
suggested deployment of heavy contingents of the police in those
areas to ensure safe passage for the judge and maintain law and
order in the city. This included deploying a minimum of 150 policemen,
led by at least one official of Deputy Superintendent of Police
(DSP) rank at each of the flyovers and overhead bridges above Shahrah-e-Faisal.
This
plan never saw the light of day. The police force was virtually
missing all day, not only from the flyovers and overhead bridges,
but from the entire route. At the few locations where they were
present, they never left their positions nor in any way challenged
the militants running amok. A television camera actually caught
one police contingent napping by the road side.
The
instructions given to the police administration in the city were
only to block the roads leading to the airport and the Sindh High
Court building. According to some senior police officials, the provincial
government had obtained nearly 1,000 containers from Karachi Port
Trust and confiscated several private trucks and buses for the purpose.
At least 20 buses of the NED Engineering University and University
of Karachi were hijacked to the same end.
Some
of the scenes captured by the television networks, especially those
by Aaj TV, and later uploaded on various websites, include some
highly incriminating evidence against the government. In them, a
Corolla and a Liana can be seen ferrying weapons to the militants
at various locations; both vehicles, which are black, bear the distinctive
green government number plates and have blue hooters on top. The
remaining footage is equally chilling for another reason: it not
only shows the extent to which the young men are armed and familiar
with the art of using these weapons, but the assured manner in which
they conduct themselves clearly indicates that they are well-trained
in combat fighting.
Far
from taking any responsibility, however, the Sindh police chief
and the provincial home secretary later held a press conference
in which they not only absolved themselves of the responsibility
for the carnage but actually claimed credit for keeping the number
of casualties down to a minimum. "If we had not blocked these
roads and both the rallies had come face to face, there may have
been hundreds of dead," contended the acting Sindh inspector
general. He also claimed that the police was handicapped because
the visiting judge had not provided them any "map" indicating
his route to the High Court building. Incidentally, there is only
one main road that leads from the airport to the High Court building,
the same road where the maximum number of people were shot in cold
blood.
While
the police and the FC made no effort to prevent these killings on
the day in question, they have, despite the passage of several weeks,
made no effort to identify and arrest those responsible. Earlier,
the Sindh police had announced that they had installed CCTV cameras
along Shahrah-e-Faisal, where most of the deaths took place. Despite
that, they have not yet revealed the identities of those involved
in the carnage.
Likewise,
TV channels and print photographers covering the event captured
images of those involved in the firing incidents. In, perhaps, what
was the most publicised incident of that day, heavy firing took
place in the vicinity of the Aaj TV office. The staff of the local
television channel were seen making frantic calls to every one they
knew in the government to come to their aid. But the police have
not even bothered to view this footage, let alone apprehend anyone
captured on it.
According
to insiders, the 19 arrests the police claim to have made in connection
with the violence are of individuals who were giving vent to their
rage over the killings, and were either pelting stones at police
vans or setting public property ablaze. None of those arrested were
involved in the firing itself.
Some
five years back, the federal government had launched a de-weaponisation
drive in the country. Other than illegal weapons, the drive had
sought to reclaim weapons of prohibited bore, such as AK-47 rifles,
from people who had been issued licenses for them. Incidentally,
all the weapons used on May 12 were of prohibited bore, but the
police made no effort to confiscate them or apprehend those in possession
of them.
Ironically
for the police and other law- enforcing agencies, which were roundly
condemned for their inaction, the MQM too, keen to pass the buck
in an effort at damage control, has begun asking questions as to
why they were "mysteriously" missing from the scene. "Where
were the police and Rangers during the bloodbath? It's very difficult
to find the answer to this question given that the country's first
prime minister, Liaquat Ali Khan's murder investigation is yet to
be solved," said MQM supremo Altaf Hussain in an open letter
in the following days.
Similarly,
Dr. Farooq Sattar, at a press conference in Islamabad, said that
the inadequate deployment of Rangers in Karachi was to blame for
the violence on May 12.
Farooq
Sattar also blamed ANP and PPP activists of firing back at MQM workers
and screened video clips "to prove" his allegations.
While
the air remains murky with accusations flying thick and fast, there's
no police inquiry on the anvil, as the Sindh administration has
refused to hold an independent judicial inquiry into the events
of May 12. According to insiders, the government is balking at the
prospect of any judicial inquiry as they are well aware that if
a judicial commission is set up under the present circumstances,
they will be unable to rein in an increasingly emboldened judiciary
whose investigation may expose the real culprits. Meanwhile, the
Sindh High Court has taken suo moto notice.
According
to insiders, the federal government had allowed the city to bleed
with MQM's connivance because they knew well enough that the chief
justice's defiance had triggered a movement which could prove to
be Islamabad's nemesis, and for that reason he had to be stopped
in his tracks.
These
sources contend that the MQM expected that this time too, as in
the '80s or early '90s, it could get away with murder. "What
they did not realise is that this is a new era, where hundreds of
TV camera crews and print journalists were on the roads and placed
at vantage points to capture the events," says a source. "They
simply under-estimated the situation, and now that they are exposed
to condemnation across the board, they are resorting to damage control
strategies," he explains.
However,
some political observers aver that this time the MQM has damaged
its image irretrievably. The events of May 12 have demonstrated
that the party has yet to demonstrate tolerance for political views
at variance with its own. Hundreds of people from different ethnicities,
who had joined MQM when it was converted to Muttahida from Mohajir
Qaumi Movement, have either tendered their resignations or slipped
away from non-mohajir-dominated areas and gone into hiding after
the killings; many Urdu-speaking people in Karachi are at pains
to stress their distance from the MQM. Although the party may still
believe that Karachi belongs to them, an increasing section of the
city begs to differ. 
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