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"They
had planned to use explosives to destroy the boundary wall of the
prison through a remote control bomb," says an intelligence
source, revealing details of a jailbreak planned by militants in
Karachi. He said that if information had not been leaked in advance
to jail officials, the militants may have broken through and escaped.
Soon
after the attempt was aborted, scores of police armed with assault
rifles took up positions on the watchtowers and gates of the prison.
Paramilitary troops in vehicles mounted with machine guns have also
started patrolling the fences as well as streets surrounding the
prison.
There are nearly 5,500 prisoners, including nearly 180 hardcore
Islamists belonging to outlawed militants groups, housed in this
colonial-era jail, which is located in the east of the city of Karachi.
Some of the militants in prison are facing prosecution in connection
with assassination attempts on General Pervez Musharraf, suicide
attacks at the US Consulate and killing of 11 French engineers in
Karachi and other such acts of terrorism.
This
is the second time that these militants have attempted a jailbreak
in the span of the last two years. When British-born Ahmed Omar
Saeed Sheikh was detained for his alleged involvement in the kidnap-slaying
of the Wall Street Journal's South Asia correspondent, Daniel Pearl,
he was moved to Hyderabad prison, after authorities learnt that
his comrades-in-arm planned to storm Karachi prison to release him.
Investigations
into the latest jailbreak attempt revealed that all the militants
are housed in separate cells in this high-walled prison, but the
jail administration had allowed them to say their prayers collectively
every day from 6 to 11 in the morning and to recite the Quran in
a mosque located within the compound of the prison. "Since
all these militants meet at the mosque every day, this is where
they conceived the idea and chalked out the strategy to escape,"
says an official privy to the investigations.
Investigators said these militants coordinated the plan with
a convict by the name of Khurram, who comes from Mansehra in the
North-West Frontier Province. Khurram was involved in a murder case
in Mansehra and was sentenced to hang by the court after he was
proven guilty. He managed to escape from the jail premises some
two years back and had sought shelter somewhere in Karachi. He was
arrested again by the police after they recovered a pistol from
his possession. "He became known to these militants in the
mosque inside the prison, where he was a regular visitor,"
says a source.
The
militants requested Khurram to ask his relatives to help them smuggle
small weapons as well as urea, potassium and other material used
in making bombs. "Khurram had already asked his brother who
came to meet him in jail this month to get the small weapons concealed
in the bottom of locally made sandals and to smuggle them inside
the jail," says a source.
These
sources said substances used in making bombs were supplied to them
on a small scale inside the jail and they hadalready practiced making
a bomb. "They put small amounts of urea, potassium, soap particles
and other substances in a small glass bottle and detonated it inside
the jail," says an insider.
"Some of the militants detained in the jail are real
experts in making these bombs," says an investigator. A militant
called Hafiz Zubair, who belonged to the outlawed Lashkar-e-Jhangvi
group and was part of the jailbreak gang, has been imparting training
to these militants in making these bombs in Afghanistan, according
to the investigation.
Sources
said the other militants who were part of the jailbreak gang include
Sharib, Wasim alias Orangi Townwalla, Faisal alias Pehlwan, Sabir
Ali Waseem, Roshan Raza and others. Most of the gang members belonged
to the Harkat-e-Jihad-e-Aalami, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and other outlawed
militant groups.
According to the plan
revealed to the investigators, fellow militants outside the jail
had been asked to park a car laden with explosives at the eastern
side of the prison and to detonate it through remote control. "They
had expected that this car bomb would either blow the jail wall
into pieces or would create a hole large enough for them to escape,"
says an investigator. "The blast, according to their estimate,
would create chaos, and they would then escape from the jail, using
small weapons that they had planned to smuggle inside."
"They had already communicated the exact timing as well as
the date of the escape attempt to militants outside the jail through
their lookouts, while the weapons they had ordered were also on
the way," says an investigator.
These investigators said the attempt was foiled after one of the
militants who was initially part of the whole plan lost his nerve
and leaked the information to the jail administration. He leaked
the plan to the authorities after he realised that the explosion
would kill many innocent people inside and outside the jail.
Immediately after the plan was leaked, the authorities started investigating
into the conspiracy. "The militants had burried sulphur, potassium
and urea in the ground near cell no 19, where they were detained,"
says an insder. Sources said they collected small amounts of urea,
sulphur, potassium and other residues used in the bombs from inside
the premises. All the militants are now locked up in isolation wards,
where they are being grilled.
The police have also arrested Khurram's brother who was supposed
to supply small arms. He has confessed to the police that he had
already ordered at least a dozen sandals with concealed T.T pistols
in the Frontier province and had to simply collect them to supply
to his brother.
Authorities are now planning to transfer the suspects behind
the conspiracy to different jails across the country. "It will
be very difficult to keep them in isolation cells for a long time
and the best way to avoid a major mishap in the future is to shift
them to different prisons, because we know that keeping all of them
at one place can turn out to be a disaster," admits a senior
official.
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