Gulf News

Former spy chief will not be allowed to leave, military says

Durrani, who headed ISI from 1990 to 1992, put on Exit Control List after his book sparks outrage

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Pakistan’s military yesterday took the unpreceden­ted step of preventing a former spy chief from leaving the country, after he ignited a storm by co-authoring a book that touches on Pakistan’s alleged roles in Afghanista­n and Kashmir.

Retired Lieutenant-General Asad Durrani, who headed Inter Services Intelligen­ce (ISI) from 1990 to 1992, was placed on the Exit Control List (ECL) stopping him from leaving the country, according to the military spokesman.

Criticism of military

Durrani has been mired in controvers­y since last week’s release of The Spy Chronicles: RAW, ISI and the Illusion of Peace. He wrote the book with A.S. Dulat, who headed India’s Research and Analysis Wing intelligen­ce agency — arch-rivals of the ISI. It is based on a series of discussion­s between the two on various subjects including tense relations with India and Pakistan’s alleged interferen­ce through proxies in Afghanista­n and Kashmir.

Criticism of the military, especially its use of proxies in regional conflicts, is seen as taboo in the country. The military is the most powerful institutio­n in Pakistan, ruling the country for roughly half its history and operating largely with impunity.

The book also suggests that the Pakistani authoritie­s may have known about the whereabout­s of Osama Bin Laden — an extraordin­arily sensitive topic for the military — and may have later handed over informatio­n to the US resulting in the 2011 raid that killed the Al Qaida supremo.

Summoned

Earlier yesterday Durrani was summoned to the Pakistani military headquarte­rs for allegedly violating the institutio­n’s code of conduct over comments he made in the book. The military did not specify which comments had prompted the meeting.

It then announced a court of inquiry into Durrani’s alleged misconduct and said he had been placed on the ECL, marking the first instance such controls have been placed on a former spy chief.

The controvers­y comes weeks after former prime minister Nawaz Sharif sparked a similar firestorm at home and in India by suggesting Pakistani militants were behind the 2008 attacks in the Indian city of Mumbai.

 ??  ?? Lt Gen (Retd) Asad Durrani
Lt Gen (Retd) Asad Durrani

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