Windsor Star

Pakistani dissident found dead in Toronto

Activist's death raises anger and suspicion

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO • The apparent drowning death of an internatio­nally prominent Pakistani dissident whose body was pulled from the water near downtown Toronto sparked anger, grief and suspicion on Tuesday.

Police said they had found Karima Mehrab, 37, dead on Monday. Mehrab, widely known as Karima Baloch, had been reported missing a day earlier.

“It is currently being investigat­ed as a non-criminal death,” Toronto police said in a statement. “There are not believed to be any suspicious circumstan­ces.”

However, a close friend and fellow activist told The Canadian Press that Mehrab had recently received death threats, and he and her family were deeply suspicious about what had happened to her.

“Her husband got messages from unknown people saying they would give a Christmas gift to Karima she will never forget,” Lateef Johar said in an interview.

While police offered no details about the death, Johar said officers had told her family she was found drowned in the water.

“We respect whatever the police says but we will never believe and accept that it was an accident,” Johar said. “She was a brave woman.”

Mehrab’s husband, who Johar said had arrived in Canada for a visit two weeks ago from the U.K., could not immediatel­y be reached for comment on Tuesday.

Mehrab was a leader with the Baloch Student Organizati­on, which advocates for the independen­ce of Pakistan’s ethnic Baloch areas in the country’s southwest. The group accuses Pakistani authoritie­s of human rights atrocities in the region, where armed Baloch groups have been fighting a yearslong separatist war against Pakistani security forces.

Pakistan’s military and government have steadfastl­y denied any rights abuses.

Mehrab fled Pakistan in 2015 amid terrorism charges and death threats, arriving in November that year in Canada, where she successful­ly applied for refugee status. On a day of her asylum hearing, Johar said, the body of her uncle — believed abducted by the military 18 months earlier — was found in Pakistan.

Johar, who spent time with Mehrab last week in a library at the University of Toronto, where she was taking first-year courses, said she came here to keep herself safe.

Mehrab continued her activism in Canada. In a social media post last week, she tweeted a link to a newspaper story on the plight of Pakistan’s “disappeare­d.”

The BBC named Mehrab to its annual list of 100 inspiratio­nal and influentia­l women in 2016.

 ?? DAVE ABEL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? The BBC named Pakistani activist Karima Mehrab to its annual list of 100 inspiratio­nal and influentia­l women in 2016.
DAVE ABEL / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES The BBC named Pakistani activist Karima Mehrab to its annual list of 100 inspiratio­nal and influentia­l women in 2016.

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