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Hayatullah
Khan's family waited over six months for his return. But when the
day finally came for Hayatullah to return home, there was no joyful
reunion - just a phone call saying where they could find his body.
On
December 5, the tribal journalist was abducted from Epi village
road, four kilometers east of Mirali in North Waziristan agency.
He was with one of his brothers and a cousin when five Kalashnikov-wielding,
Taliban-looking gunmen ordered him into their vehicle. The next
time his family saw him was on June 16 - his body handcuffed and
bullet-ridden.
Journalism
is increasingly becoming a deadly job in Pakistan. And this holds
true, particularly in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA),
which lie on the fringes of the new great game in the region.
The
murder of Hayatullah Khan, the latest victim of this profession,
has sent shock waves down the spine of the journalist community.
Newsmen suddenly find themselves in the line of fire. And nobody
believes that Hayatullah is going to be the last victim.
His
friends and family are convinced that a security agency is involved
in his abduction and murder. The assailants, his family believes,
disguised themselves as Taliban members to deceive witnesses into
thinking they were militants.
"We assumed that the Taliban had taken him away. But
they distanced themselves from Hayat's abduction through a letter
and a messenger," Ihsanullah, Hayatullah's brother, told Newsline.
He's convinced that the Taliban are not involved. "They don't
hide such acts, if they ever commit them. They do it openly... we
have seen it with our own eyes."
Subsequently,
a purported Taliban spokesman called journalists in Peshawar, saying
they were not involved in Hayatullah's killing and said he was murdered
by the secret agencies.
Hayatullah was kidnapped apparently after he released pictures showing
parts of a US missile that killed senior Al-Qaeda operative, Hamza
Rabia, in North Waziristan on December 1. These photographs contradicted
government claims that Hamza Rabia was killed in an accidental explosives
blast in a house. What caused the Al-Qaeda leader's death remains
a mystery. However, in an interview with BBC Urdu, Hayatullah's
wife claimed that security personnel trapped her husband by repeatedly
asking him to publish stories that it was a US missile that had
hit the Al-Qaeda man's hideout.
Whether
Hayatullah printed the pictures of his own accord or whether he
was coerced into doing so is a big question mark - as is what happened
to him subsequently. But what is clear is that the journalist had
a reputation for being bold and gutsy. His reports for the Urdu
daily Ausaf, The Nation, and European Press Agency (EPA) were often
critical of government operations in the tribal areas. An M.Sc.
in economics from Government Post Graduate College, Bannu, he started
his journalistic career in 1998. He has four children: Naila, 9,
Farishta, 7, Kamran, 5, and Faisal, 2.
His
family had good reason to believe that Hayatullah would come back
alive. "On May 15, the North Waziristan political agent Zaheerul
Islam told me that 'your brother will be released between June 15
and June 20.' But on June 16, I heard the news about his death,"
Ihsanullah said.
Hayatullah's
family believes he was killed handcuffed because he had escaped,
and later found by his abductors, who had then decided to shoot
him. Another story doing the rounds was that his captors brought
him to a Taliban-infested area and shot him dead to spark off rumours
of his being killed in a crossfire between government forces and
the militants.
Hayatullah's family and the journalist community in Peshawar and
Islamabad continuously protested against his detention, but their
protests fell on deaf ears. "You are further complicating the
problem by your agitation," a Peshawar-based journalist quoted
a senior official as saying during a meeting with a high-level government
functionary.
Following
a battery of protests from the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists,
the Khyber Union of Journalists and the All Pakistan Newspaper Employees
Confederation against Hayatullah's murder, the government was forced
to take action and Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz announced a judicial
inquiry into the murder. A Peshawar high court judge Justice Raza
Muhammad was appointed to conduct the probe.
Incidentally, Hayatullah was not the first tribal journalist to
die in the line of duty. Two journalists, Allah Noor of AVT Khyber
TV and Amir Nawab Khan, a correspondent with the daily The Nation,
were killed on February 7 last year. They were returning after covering
a peace deal between the Taliban militant Baitullah Mehsud and the
law enforcement agencies in Wana.
Unknown masked men opened fire on their vehicle in Wana. Both Allah
Noor and Amir Nawab succumbed to their injuries in hospital. A third
journalist, Anwar Shakir, a stringer with the AFP, was badly injured
in the firing.
A few days later, an unknown group calling itself Sipah-e-Islam
took responsibility for the killings in a letter faxed to newspaper
offices. It accused some journalists of "working for Christians,"
and of "being used as tools in negative propaganda" against
the Muslim mujahideen. No clues to these killings have yet been
unearthed.
On December 5, Nasir Afridi, president of Darra Adam Khel Press
Club and correspondent of an Urdu daily, was shot and killed while
driving in his car in the Khyber Agency. He was caught in the crossfire
of a battle between the Bazikhel and the Malakhel tribes. A truck
driver was also killed by a stray bullet.
But targeted killings are more common. Religious extremists in Khyber
Agency threatened two journalists in early 2006. Nasrullah Afridi,
a correspondent for the dailies Mashriq and The Statesman, and Khyalmat
Shah, president of the Tribal Union of Journalists (TUJ) in the
Khyber Agency (west of Peshawar), were both threatened by local
religious leader Mufti Munir Shakir after they reported clashes
between his supporters and those of his rival, Mufti Pir Saifur
Rehman. They were forced to submit sureties that they would not
publish such stories in the future.
Incidentally, the political administration in the seven tribal agencies
on the Pak-Afghan border has restricted journalists' entry into
the region since the military launched a major offensive against
suspected Al-Qaeda fighters in South Waziristan in early 2004.
The pressure from the militants and the administration has forced
most journalists to either shift from Waziristan to adjacent districts
or say adieu to their profession. "Most professional newsmen
have shifted from the tribal areas to adjoining Dera Ismail Khan,
Bannu, Tank, Peshawar and Karachi. It's hard for them to live in
the tribal areas anymore," remarked Sailab Mehsud, president
of the Tribal Union of Journalists.
"The
tribal area is passing through a very sensitive phase. It has come
under international focus and the entire country's stability depends
on the situation in the tribal areas," the NWFP governor, Lt
Gen (Ret) Ali Muhammad Jan Orakzai, told a delegation of journalists
who met with him to lodge a protest over Hayatullah's killing.
"I,
in my capacity as your brother, ask you to keep in mind the national
interest when filing your stories," he said. "The situation
can take a dangerous turn, if my position as a tribal governor is
not utilised in improving the state of affairs in the tribal areas."
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