High-level committee formed on Bilawal's directives to investigate Naqeeb's 'encounter' in Karachi
A committee comprising the Inspector General Police (IGP) Counter-terrorism Department (CTD) Sanaullah Abbasi and DIGs South and East was formed on Thursday, on the directives of PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, to investigate the alleged extrajudicial killing of Naqeebullah who was reportedly shot dead in a "staged encounter".
A notification issued by the office of provincial inspector general police said the committee is mandated to "assess the genuineness of encounter" and "dig out profile of the deceased", and directed to submit its findings within three days.
Earlier in the day, Sindh Home Minister Sohail Anwar Siyal took notice of the incident, following reports that the 27-year-old hailing from South Waziristan was innocent, and ordered deputy inspector general South to personally conduct an inquiry into the matter following Bilawal's directions.
Naqeebullah was allegedly among the four suspects killed in an 'encounter' with a police team headed by Senior Superintendent of Police Rao Anwar in the Usman Khaskheli Goth on the outskirts of the metropolis last week.
The police claim that the deceased was a militant affiliated with the banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).
However, a statement reportedly issued by a spokesman of TTP's South Waziristan chapter termed SSP Anwar's claim as "baseless". It said Naqeebullah had no links with the banned militant outfit.
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Anwar had alleged at the time that the slain suspects were involved in several high-profile terror cases and had ties with terrorist outfits Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LJ) and the militant Islamic State (IS). However, Naqeebullah — whose name is given as Naseemullah on his national identity card — was not mentioned by name at the time.
But a relative of Naqeebullah disputed SSP Anwar's claim that the slain youth was a former commander of the TTP in South Waziristan's Makeen tehsil, saying instead that the deceased was, in fact, a shop owner fond of modelling.