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Syed Saleem Shahzad
Journalist
--: Biography of Syed Saleem Shahzad :--

 

Syed Saleem Shahzad   was a Pakistani investigative journalist who wrote widely for leading European and Asian media. He served as the Pakistan Bureau Chief of Asia Times Online (Hong Kong) and Italian news agency Adnkronos (AKI).  He was found dead in a canal in North-east Pakistan, showing signs of torture, two days after he was kidnapped. Human Rights Watch (HRW) accused the Pakistan intelligence services of being behind his killing, and US government officials later announced that they had "reliable and conclusive" intelligence that this was the case. Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence(ISI) vehemently denied the accusations and called them "totally unfounded."
 
Syed Saleem Shahzad was born in Karachi on November 3, 1970.  He was the son of Syed Shamim Akhtar and Marifa Meraj Fatima, herself the great-granddaughter of Anwari Begum (sister of Hakim Syed Karam Husain and daughter of Qazi Mir Imdad Ali). Shahzad's parents arrived from India after Partition. Shahzad was the elder brother of Syed Waseem Fawad and Mariam Shamim/Imran.
Shahzad was permenant resident of Karachi. Shahzad had shifted to Islamabad in the middle of year 2009; which was the need of his assignments
 
Shahzad completed Matriculation from GRand Folk's English School, Karachi  Shahzad earned a Bachelor Degree in Commerce from Government National College1  and Master of Arts in International Relations from Karachi University.  While in college, Shahzad was a member of Jamaat-e-Islami's student wing but later stopped supporting the group as too radical.
 
Shahzad was married to Anita Ameer and the couple had three children including two sons and one daughter: Syed Fahad Saleem (son), Amna Saleem (daughter) and Syed Rahman Shah (son).
 
Syed Saleem Shahzad covered a variety of topics through his career, including global security issues, Pakistani armed forces, Islamic movements, and Muslim resistance movements in Lebanon and Iraq. The Taliban and Al-Qaeda were the regular topics of his writing. He was an international journalist who travelled widely in the Middle East, Asia and Europe. He also wrote for Le Monde Diplomatique(France), La Stampa (Italy) and Dawn (Pakistan). He was South Asia Correspondent for Italian news agency Adnkronos International(AKI).  His opinion pieces appeared in the Qatari-based Islamonline.net and Boston Review.
He regularly interviewed Islamist militants, including Al-Qaeda members.  Shahzad introduced the world to hitherto unknown Al-Qaeda figures, including Sheikh Essa  He had interviewed several leading militants long before they became internationally known, including Sirajuddin Haqqani     and Qari Ziaur Rahman  He also interviewed Ilyas Kashmiri   shortly after Ilyas was appointed chief of Al-Qaeda’s military committee.
 
His last book Inside Al-Qaeda and the Taliban: Beyond Bin Laden and 9/11, was published shortly before his death.
 
Shahzad's work was regularly reproduced in Pakistani English dailies including the Daily Times, the Nation and The Post, and in Urdu  newspapers such as Daily Mashriq and Aaj Daily. His articles were reproduced in many English dailies in Afghanistan and Bangladesh, as well as in local-language dailies. His work was often quoted in the US, Canadian and Indian press.
 
Saleem was an associate of the Pakistan Security Research Unit of the department of Peace Studies of the University of Bradford. In November 2006 he was held in Taliban captivity in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan for a few days. He wrote a detailed account of his days in captivity and time he spent with the Taliban in a series, "In the Land of the Taliban" published in Asia Times Online.
 
Shahzad is awarded by Ischia, International Journalism Award  
 
Just prior to his disappearance in May 2011, the journalist wrote in the Asia Times Online that al-Qaeda carried out the PNS Mehran attack after negotiations with the Navy for the release of officials, suspected of al-Qaeda links, had failed. According to Shahzad, the attackers were all from Ilyas Kashmiri's 313 Brigade of al-Qaeda    
 
  Death
 
According to friends and colleagues, the ISI warned the journalist at least three times prior to his death.  In October 2010, Shahzad was summoned to ISI headquarters the day after publishing a sensitive article on Abdul Ghani Baradar's capture.  Afterwards he wrote to Human Rights Watch (HRW) predicting that he might be detained by Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency. According to a researcher at Human Rights Watch, Ali Dayan Hasan, he was "fairly sure that sooner or later something was going to happen".  In an email passed to HRW, Shahzad informed Hasan that he was threatened by an ISI official who said: "I must give you a favor. We have recently arrested a terrorist and recovered a lot of data, diaries and other material during the interrogation. The terrorist had a list with him. If I find your name in the list, I will certainly let you know."  In a June 2011 opinion piece for The News International, journalist Ahmed Quraishi stated the "agency’s version is very straightforward: they met Shahzad at a registered government office about a story he did and asked him either to confirm his sources or retract the story because it damaged Pakistani interests."  Nine days prior to his disappearance, Shahzad met with American journalist Dexter Filkins and told him, "Look, I'm in danger... I've got to get out of Pakistan."
 
Shahzad disappeared on the evening of 29 May 2011 in Islamabad. He reportedly left his home around 5:30 pm local time that evening to take part in a TV show scheduled for 6:00 pm, but at 5:42 pm his cell phone was switched off and he failed to arrive at the television bureau. A complaint was lodged with the police the following morning. Elsewhere that morning, a laborer found his body, still wearing a suit, a tie and shoes, in the Upper Jhelum Canal while the zamindar of an upstream village notified police of an abandoned Toyota Corolla that later proved to be Shahzad's.
 
On the next day, his family members from Islamabad confirmed that he was dead, with police stating that his body had been found in a canal in Mandi Bahauddin district and his car found at Sarai Alamgir in Pakistan's northern Gujrat District, some 150 km (93 mi) south-east of the capital. His car was found about 10 km (six miles) away.
 
Pakistani Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani ordered an immediate inquiry into the kidnapping and murder,  and on 3 June Pakistan’sInterior Minister Rehman Malik duly announced an investigative judicial commission headed by a Supreme Court justice  Bowing to unprecedented demonstrations from Pakistani media, PM Gilani signed an order in the early morning hours of June 18, 2011 establishing a judicial commission, lead by Justice Main Saqib Nisar, to investigate the circumstances surrounding Shazad's death. The commission was to release its findings within six weeks.
 
The New York Times reported on 4 July 2011 that the Obama administration had "reliable and conclusive" intelligence that implicated senior officials of the ISI in directing the death of Shahzad.[4] Subsequently Admiral Michael Mullen stated that he believed that Shahzad's killing was "sanctioned by the [Pakistani] government" but added that he did not have a "string of evidence" linking the ISI.  The Pakistani state-run news agency, Associated Press of Pakistan, said the soon-to-retire Mullen's charge was "extremely irresponsible." The Associated Press report of the APP comment went on to say:
 
Pakistan was the deadliest country for journalists in 2010, with at least eight killed in the line of duty, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. Six died in suicide attacks, the group said in a report late last year. Despite the dangers, the media establishment in Pakistan has expanded rapidly over the past decade, and reporters here operate with freedoms denied in most developing countries. Still, many privately admit to getting occasional pressure from security and intelligence officials.
 
The ISI strongly denied any involvement in Shahzad's death. Two days after his body as found, the intelligence agency released an official statement that described the death as "unfortunate and tragic" while maintaining that "baseless accusations against the country’s sensitive agencies for their alleged involvement in Shahzad’s murder are totally unfounded."
 
Source : Wikipedia
 
 
 
 
 
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