August 27, 2002
His Excellency Gen. Pervez Musharraf President, Islamic
Republic of Pakistan Islamabad, Pakistan
Via facsimile:
92-51-922-4206
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is
writing to draw your attention to recent harassment of the well-known
journalist Shaheen Sehbai, who is living in the United States, and his
family members who are living in Pakistan.
On August 20, police
in Rawalpindi filed a First Information Report (FIR) against Sehbai,
editor of the online weekly South Asia Tribune, falsely accusing
him of criminal acts allegedly committed in February 2001. The complaint
was made by Khalid Mahmud Hejazi, who is, according to Sehbai, a
civilian employee who works at the Pakistani army's general headquarters
in Rawalpindi. Hejazi was formerly married to a cousin of
Sehbai's.
The FIR states, among other things, that Sehbai
threatened to rob Hejazi at his home at gunpoint, and names Sehbai's
wife, as well as several nieces and nephews as complicit in this
crime.
Sehbai and his wife live in the United States, and so are
in no danger of arrest. However, police have been harassing Sehbai's
relatives.
On August 21, the day after the complaint was filed,
Rawalpindi police arrived at the home of Asif Khan, a relative of
Sehbai's whose son was named in the FIR. Police said they wanted to
question the boy, who is a teenager, about the alleged incident. Khan
told police his son was not at home, and the officers left without
incident. The next day, police went to the shop of another relative,
asking for the whereabouts of the teenager, whose name is Imran. On
August 26, police went to Imran's cousin's home and questioned relatives
there about the boy's whereabouts.
This afternoon, on August 27,
police returned to the home of Imran's father, Asif Khan, and arrested
him. Police at R.A. Bazaar police station in Rawalpindi told local
journalists that Asif Khan had been arrested for public drunkenness,
according to Sehbai.
Sehbai believes that the original FIR
accusing him and his family members of criminal actions was registered
at the instigation of officials in the military government who are
unhappy with reports critical of the regime that were published in the South Asia Tribune. The
government's Press Information Department issued a statement today
denying these allegations and claiming that the "filing of the case
[against Sehbai] is coincidental rather than intentional."
Sehbai had previously worked as editor of the national
English-language daily The News, one of Pakistan's most
influential newspapers. He resigned from The News on March 1,
citing government interference with the paper's editorial
content.
As an organization of journalists dedicated to the
defense of our colleagues worldwide, CPJ is deeply concerned that the
harassment of Sehbai and his relatives is politically motivated. We urge
Your Excellency to order a prompt inquiry into police actions against
Sehbai's relatives. We also ask you to guarantee that Sehbai's cousin
Asif Khan is not harmed in any way, and that he is released
immediately.
We thank you for your attention to these urgent
matters and await your response.
Sincerely,
 Ann Cooper Executive
Director
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