|
In
his halcyon days, Abdul Qadeer Khan, now 69, was accustomed to adulation
and worship. Credited with fathering the "first Islamic atom
bomb," Khan has, for decades, been publicly hailed as a national
hero. His life-size portraits adorned the streets. People named
their children after him. His motorcade used to be even larger than
that afforded to the head of state. As a precious national asset,
he was protected by military commandos. But even national heroes
have their tragic flaws. The idol has now fallen from grace after
his dramatic public confession of betraying the national trust by
transferring nuclear technology to Libya, Iran and Korea.
Khan
played a key role in Pakistan's nuclear weapons capability that
culminated in successful tests in May 1998. Coming shortly after
similar tests by arch rival India, the explosions established Pakistan
as the world's seventh nuclear power.
Born into a modest family in Bhopal, India, in 1935, Khan
migrated to Pakistan in 1952. After graduating from Karachi University,
he moved to Europe for higher studies in Germany and Belgium. In
the 1970s, he took up a job at a uranium-enrichment plant run by
the British-Dutch-German consortium, Urenco. There he met his Dutch
wife, Hendrina.
He
returned home in 1976 to head the nation's nuclear programme, a
position he held for 26 years. Khan Research Laboratories (KRL),
named after Khan, became Pakistan's main nuclear facility. The project
is credited with ultimately leading to Pakistan's first nuclear
test explosion in May 1998.
His procurement of the secret centrifuge design from Urenco
was critical to Pakistan's successful nuclearisation. He was charged
with stealing trade secrets and sentenced, in absentia, to a four-year
prison term by a court in the Netherlands in 1983. The sentence
was later quashed on appeal.
With unlimited government resources at his disposal that
were free of auditing restrictions, Khan, a metallurgist who is
often wrongly referred to as a nuclear scientist, managed to purchase
restricted materials from European and American companies. In the
process, he became a wealthy man.
He owns several palatial houses in Islamabad. In recent weeks,
newspapers have reported that Khan had a vast array of real estate
holdings in several foreign countries, including a hotel in Timbuktu,
Mali. His fondness for vintage cars is evident from a huge fleet
parked at one of his villas at the foot of Islamabad's scenic Margalla
hills.
Khan is known to have a megaton ego. Even when he was at
the centre of investigations into his role in the most shocking
nuclear proliferation scandal, he threw down the gauntlet by boasting
in a television interview: "Who made the atom bomb? I made
it. Who made the missiles? I made them for you."
He recently told a news website: "I am proud of my work
for my country. It has given Pakistan a sense of pride, security
and has been a great scientific achievement." His success made
KRL, according to one analyst, "an unaccountable state within
the larger unaccountable praetorian state of Pakistan." Like
a king he doled out money to build monuments and funded seminars
that projected him as a "great Islamic hero."
In later years, Mr Khan launched a campaign against illiteracy
and built several educational institutes.
His aura began to diminish in March 2001 when President Musharraf,
reportedly under US pressure, removed him from KRL. He continued
to attract US suspicion and, in 2003, Washington imposed sanctions
on the KRL for the alleged transfer of missile technology from North
Korea.
Nevertheless, Pakistan's nuclear establishment had never
expected to see its most revered hero in the dock. The latest revelation
about his dubious deals and extraordinary wealth may have dented
his image, but he continues to remain popular among the common people
who refuse to admit any flaw in their icon.
|