Home Latest News Suspect in MQM Leader’s London Murder Arrested

Suspect in MQM Leader’s London Murder Arrested

by AFP
Asif Hassan—AFP

Asif Hassan—AFP

Interior minister says intelligence agencies worked on the case for a year before making the arrest.

Pakistan on Monday announced the arrest of a suspect in connection with the 2010 murder of influential politician Imran Farooq in London, terming it a major breakthrough in the highly charged case.

Farooq, 50, a founding member of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) party, was stabbed and beaten to death in Edgware, northwest London, as he returned home from work in September 2010. Critics of the MQM, a powerful political force in Karachi, have claimed that the killing of Farooq was linked to an internal dispute in the party, which has been run from London by exiled leader Altaf Hussain for over two decades. The MQM has strongly denied the claims.

Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan told reporters in Islamabad that intelligence agencies had toiled hard on the case for over a year before making their first arrest. “Our security agencies and police have been trying to arrest a suspect in Imran Farooq’s murder for a year,” he said.

The suspect was arrested in Karachi, and would appear in court on Tuesday, Khan said. “With the evidence we have, I am confident that there will be quick progress in this case now,” he said, adding that security agencies in Britain and Pakistan were cooperating in the investigation.

A security official, speaking on condition of anonymity, named the suspect as Muazam Ali, and said he was an immigration consultant accused of making travel arrangements for Farooq’s killers.

British police had made two arrests in connection with the killing but both suspects were later freed on bail. They believe that Farooq was under surveillance in the days and weeks before his murder.

Farooq claimed asylum in Britain in 1999. He was wanted in Pakistan over scores of charges including torture and murder related to the MQM’s activities, but always claimed the accusations were politically motivated. He was twice elected an M.P. in Pakistan, but went into hiding in 1992 when the government ordered a military crackdown against party activists in Karachi.

The arrest came weeks after paramilitary forces raided the MQM’s headquarters in Karachi, confiscating a cache of arms and arresting several activists, including one convicted of murdering a journalist.

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