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"Kiya
haal hain bhai, aap ka business kaisa chal raha hay," an 80-year-old
man greets a neighbour who moved to Karachi's upscale Clifton locality
from a lower middle class neighbourhood in North Nazimabad 10 years
ago. Taken by surprise, the neighbour asks, "Do you know who
I am?" The old man embraces him and says, "What are you
saying? How can I forget my neighbours?" To assure him that
he knew him well, he addresses him by name, asking about his wife's
health, whom he still remembers.
The
old man was Abdul Rauf Khan, eldest of the five brothers of the
architect of the country's nuclear bomb, while the man whom he greeted
was an acquaintance who introduced me to Rauf Khan. While Rauf could
recall everything from childhood tales to the family's migration
from Bhopal, India in 1952, when it came to a two-week old conversation
he had with Dr. Khan on the phone, he said, "Baray mian ab
boorhay ho gai hain aur bhool jaatai hain kay kiya baat huvi hai
"
Often seen riding a rusty bike, Abdul Rauf Khan lives in
this lower middle class locality of Karachi and recalls how all
his family members, including Dr. Khan, lived in this house when
they migrated from India.
Khan
said all the five brothers and two sisters were born in Bhopal,
where their father was serving as a primary teacher. "My father
retired as a headmaster from a school in Central Province (CP) in
1951 and our entire family, except one brother, migrated to Pakistan
one year after my father's retirement," he said.
According to Abdul Rauf Khan, Dr. Abdul Qadeer is the youngest
of five brothers and two sisters. Three of his brothers and two
sisters are settled in Karachi while one lives in Holland and Dr.
Khan himself resides in Islamabad.
Abdul Lateef Khan, second in line, retired from PIA a few
years ago and settled in Holland. "He doesn't want to live
here at all for personal reasons," Rauf said.
Abdul Hafeez Khan, who chose to stay back in India, returned
to Pakistan in the early '80s and is settled in Karachi. "He
migrated to Pakistan after seeking retirement in India where he
worked in the revenue department," says Rauf Khan. Dr. Khan's
fourth brother, Abdul Qayoom Khan, who recently retired from National
Bank as a Senior Vice President, lives in Karachi's upscale Defence
Housing Society.
Rauf Khan said he joined the Sindh police as a junior clerk
in 1953 soon after the family migrated to Pakistan, to support the
family. "I sought premature retirement as a senior clerk once
I completed 25 years in service," he recalls. Khan cites two
reasons for opting for pre-mature retirement. Firstly, he said,
"this police job was not my type and secondly, by that time
Dr. Qadeer had moved to Pakistan and taken over as head of Kahuta
Research Laboratories."
Rauf Khan said their old and ailing mother lived with Dr.
Qadeer Khan when he moved to Pakistan and he was finding it difficult
to care for her properly. "He was busy all the time either
working in his lab, holding meetings or travelling back and forth
and had no time to look after her," he said.
He said Dr. Qadeer asked him to move to his house in a newly
built but highly restricted housing colony in Kahuta. "There
was everything in the house from lavish food to assorted servants,
but I was bored because hardly anybody was allowed to come and meet
us there," he said. In no time, Rauf returned to Karachi to
his family home in Muslim Quarters, Nazimabad "Here I can meet
anyone I want and there is no problem in socialising," he says.
Rauf Khan, who lives a very austere life, says he doesn't
tell everyone that Dr. Abdul Qadeer - still a celebrity - is his
brother. "It took me at least a month to get my passport made
and they lost my wife's picture and I had to resubmit them, but
I've never taken advantage of my brother's position," he says.
Rauf Khan, who proudly displays a picture of his younger
brother carrying his signature in his modest drawing room, is equally
proud of what he has done for the nation. "Qadeer used to stay
with me when he was studying at Karachi's D.J. Science College and,
later, Karachi University."
He said Dr. Qadeer continued to visit him at the same house
whenever he came to Karachi. The last time he saw Dr. Khan was some
six to seven months ago. "He's a very busy person, but he is
always in touch with the family."
Rauf Khan said Dr Khan continued to call the family even
after the investigation started. The last time he spoke to his brother,
some two to three weeks ago, he said, " things are settling
down and everything will soon be all right." He told Rauf to
pray for him and said, "I have left my matter in God's hands."
He said since then the communication between them has been cut off.
"They have changed all his phone numbers and I even sent my
elder son to go and enquire about his health but he was not allowed
to meet him," Rauf Khan said.
According to Khan, Dr. Qadeer had gone to Holland and Belgium
for higher studies and took up a job at a uranium enrichment plant
run by the British-Dutch-German consortium, URENCO. "There
he married Dr Hendrina after completing his studies," he said.
Qadeer was introduced to then Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
by a mutual friend who offered him a job.
"Qadeer was never willing to come to Pakistan because
he always believed that the salary structure here was not great
and that he wouldn't be able to survive if he took up a government
job," says Rauf. "But I tell you, Z.A. Bhutto was a great
man and he told Qadeer that he would give him a fabulous salary,
those matched international standards. He was reluctant, but we
persuaded him, saying that he was getting that much respect at the
highest level and he had a chance to do something for the country,
he should not waste time."
Dr. Khan finally accepted the job in 1976 and headed the
nation's nuclear programme, the job he held for 26 years. "Z.A.
Bhutto not only put unlimited and unaudited funds at his disposal,
but he told him that he was solely incharge of the programme and
nobody would ever interfere, providing he could deliver," Rauf
said.
Dr. Khan later went to Europe for a while, where he met colleagues
in the same field and brought them to Pakistan. "It was definitely
a huge responsibility put on his shoulders and he was very careful
in his selection of people and never wanted to appoint his nephews
and nieces as most people do here in Pakistan once they get an opportunity,"
he said.
Rauf said Dr. Khan had worked independently all his life and nobody
ever interfered in his job till he successfully detonated the nuclear
bomb. "He had smooth sailing all his life, but his problems
started soon after Musharraf took over in October 1999." According
to Rauf Khan, "Musharraf wanted to restrict Dr. Khan's movements
from the start, and told him to seek the government's permission
wherever he went." This was not acceptable to Dr. Khan, he
says, and he finally chose to resign as head of KRL in 2001.
"He never showed his anger, but I can tell you that he was
never comfortable with General Musharraf," he said, adding,
"Array bhai, yeh baray log apni pasand aur napasand dil mai
hi rakhtai hain aur har kisi ko hamraz naheen banatay. "
Contrary to Rauf Khan's claims that Dr. Khan voluntarily stepped
down from his job because he thought that he had achieved the task
he was given, sources said Khan was shown the door by General Pervez
Musharraf in March 2001 under US pressure, after he was found to
be involved in dubious activities.
Rauf Khan says all the accusations, against Dr. Khan, from accumulation
of wealth to connections with the nuclear underworld, are propaganda
by the west who want to malign his younger brother for one reason
or the other. "Everyone knows that he is 'enemy number one,'
especially of the US, and that's why he is implicated and maligned.
They got Z.A Bhutto, who was the pioneer of the country's nuclear
programme, hanged and thought that with his hanging, Pakistan's
nuclear programme would be over. But now they are angry with Dr.
Khan because they know that whatever Pakistan has achieved today
is just because of him," he said and adds, "all these
allegations against Dr. Khan are a farce and they want to punish
him for what he has achieved for Pakistan."
He said that when Iran, Libya and North Korea have announced officially
that Pakistan has not transferred nuclear technology to them, then
why is Qadeer still under suspicion. "I know my brother very
well and I also know that he has done no wrong. He has been made
a scapegoat just to save the generals."
Rauf Khan is concerned about his brother's health after reports
in the newspapers about his heart attack. All the communication
between Dr. Khan and his family members has been cut off and there
is no way he can inquire about his health. "He has done nothing
and he is unnecessarily being maligned to please the western world,
and they may even try to physically eliminate him to save a few
generals. They all know that Dr. Khan is the linchpin of the programme
and if he dies, all the generals involved in the scam could be saved."
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