The Guardian (USA)

Pakistan accuses Indian agents of two assassinat­ions on its soil

- Hannah Ellis-Petersen in Delhi and Shah Meer Baloch in Islamabad

Pakistan has said it has credible evidence that Indian agents carried out two assassinat­ions on Pakistani soil, and drawn comparison­s to the killing of a Sikh activist in Canada.

In a press briefing on Thursday, the foreign secretary, Muhammad Syrus Sajjad Qazi, said India was running a “sophistica­ted and sinister” campaign of “extraterri­torial and extrajudic­ial killings” inside Pakistan.

He said: “Indian agents used technology and safe havens on foreign soil to commit assassinat­ions in Pakistan. They recruited, financed and supported criminals, terrorists and unsuspecti­ng civilians to play defined roles in these assassinat­ions.”

The accusation­s add fuel to claims that the Indian government has been carrying out targeted attacks against dissidents in foreign countries. Earlier this year the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau, said there were “credible allegation­s” linking Indian intelligen­ce agents to the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a prominent Sikh activist who was killed in Canada in June. India denied the accusation­s as “absurd”.

The US made similar accusation­s against India, accusing Indian agents of directing an attempted assassinat­ion plot against Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a New York-based lawyer and prominent Sikh activist, which was foiled by US agents. The Indian government has said it is investigat­ing these allegation­s.

The Indian government had deemed Nijjar and Pannun to be terrorists connected to the Khalistani movement, which fights for an independen­t state for Sikhs in Punjab and is outlawed in India. Both had been very vocal in stirring up diaspora support for the Khalistani movement.

At the briefing in Islamabad on Thursday, Qazi said there were similariti­es between these alleged assassinat­ion plots and those that he said took place in Pakistan.

“I see a modus operandi quite similar to the killing in Canada,” he said. “It was done at the behest of Indian government. We have the passport de

tails of both Indian agents who orchestrat­ed the killings on Pakistani soil.”

He added: “Clearly the Indian network of extrajudic­ial and extraterri­torial killings has become a global phenomenon.”

India and Pakistan are arch-rivals and India has long accused Pakistan of giving a safe haven to terrorists, in particular militants responsibl­e for violence in the disputed region of Kashmir, which has been home to a longrunnin­g insurgency with an allegiance to Pakistan.

Qazi said the government had evidence to show direct links between Indian agents and the murders of two Pakistani nationals, Muhammad Riaz in September and Shahid Latif in October last year. Riaz was shot dead while praying at a mosque in Rawalakot and Latif was killed outside a mosque in Sialkot.

An investigat­ion by Pakistani agencies into Latif’s killing found that “an Indian agent based in a third country orchestrat­ed the assassinat­ion”, Qazi said.

Similarly, after Pakistani authoritie­s arrested the man accused of carrying out the murder of Riaz, he allegedly revealed that he had been recruited and guided by two Indian agents.

Qazi said the murders were orchestrat­ed by Indian intelligen­ce using a “sophistica­ted internatio­nal set-up” spread over several countries, and that social media was used to recruit teams of financiers, locaters and assassins within Pakistan and outside to carry out the murders. He claimed Pakistani authoritie­s had evidence of transactio­ns linking the killings to an Indian agent.

He said investigat­ions into other incidents were continuing. Calling the alleged killings “completely unacceptab­le”, Qazi said India needed to be held accountabl­e.

“India must be held accountabl­e internatio­nally for its blatant violation of internatio­nal law,” he said. “India’s assassinat­ion of Pakistani nationals on Pakistani soil is a violation of its sovereignt­y and a breach of the UN charter.”

 ?? ?? Protesters demonstrat­ing outside the Indian consulate in Vancouver, Canada, last June over the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar. Photograph: Ethan Cairns/AP
Protesters demonstrat­ing outside the Indian consulate in Vancouver, Canada, last June over the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar. Photograph: Ethan Cairns/AP

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