May 9, 2000
His Excellency Gen. Pervez Musharraf
Chief Executive, Islamic Republic of Pakistan
General Headquarters, Pakistani Army
Rawalpindi, Pakistan
Via fax: 92-51-922-4206/921-2434/927-0956
Your Excellency:
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) condemns the May 2 murder
of Sufi Mohammad Khan, an investigative reporter with the Daily Ummat
Karachi. While we are relieved that the gunman and two accomplices
are now in police custody, we believe, based on interviews with local
sources, that others involved in this crime may still be at large. We
call on you to ensure that a complete and impartial investigation is
carried out.
Khan, 38, was a correspondent for the Karachi-based, Urdu-language Daily
Ummat Karachi. Over the years, he had distinguished himself through
his aggressive reporting on drug trafficking and organized prostitution
in the district of Tharparkar, southern Sindh province, near India.
In mid-April, according to Khan's editor and other sources in Pakistan,
Khan published an article alleging that Ayaz Khatak, a resident of the
Tharparkar town of Shadi Large, was involved in drug trafficking. On
April 30, according to Khan's editor, Khatak visited Khan's house and
warned him to stop reporting on his activities. Refusing to be intimidated,
Khan filed a story about Khatak's alleged involvement with a local prostitute.
The article ran in Daily Ummat Karachi on May 2.
Sometime before noon on May 2, Khan left his home on a motorcycle. Khatak
was waiting for him just down the road, standing in front of a white
car with several accomplices. "I told you I would kill you," Khatak
apparently told Khan, before opening fire with a handgun. As Khan lay
dying from multiple gunshot wounds, Khatak and his accomplices fled
in the white car.
Half an hour after the killing, Khatak surrendered to the police and
confessed to the killing, describing his actions in detail. His account
was widely covered in the local press. Two other suspects are also in
police custody, including Malco Mochi. According to one of Khan's earlier
stories and other local reports, Mochi is employed by the powerful Arbab
family, which allegedly runs an organized prostitution ring out of Shadi
Large, smuggling women from Punjab province and selling them across
the border into India.
After Khan published his first reports on the Arbab family's alleged
involvement in organized prostitution, family members tried unsuccessfully
to purchase his silence. Khan refused to accept bribes and continued
to write critical stories about the Arbab clan, whereupon family members
filed a defamation case against him and his newspaper. Khan was also
threatened several times and physically assaulted twice in the past
six months, according to his editor.
As an organization of journalists dedicated to the defense of press
freedom around the world, we are dismayed that a Pakistani journalist
has been murdered simply for carrying out his professional duty. The
murder sends a chilling message to all Pakistani journalists, thus damaging
press freedom in your country. We urge you to use your good offices
to ensure that Khan's killers are brought to justice. Such an effort
would send an emphatic message that Your Excellency's government stands
for the rule of law and will not tolerate violence against journalists
in Pakistan.
We await your response.
Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director