Abiding Jinnahpur conspiracy
Asif Haroon Raja
In his recent telephonic address Altaf Hussain
recalled the 1992 military operation in Karachi and the Jinnahpur issue. Since
he affixed me to the Jinnahpur conspiracy, I feel it necessary to refresh the
memories of the readers and put the record straight. Law and order situation in
urban and rural Sindh that was deteriorating for some years because of
rural-urban ethnic divide worsened in 1992 and writ of Sindh government got
seriously compromised. Terrorists, extortionists, thugs and kidnappers mostly
affiliated with MQM had made the security situation in Karachi explosive. Dead
bodies wrapped in jute bags were often found. Maj Kalimullah from intelligence
was beaten half-dead in torture cell of no-go-area of Lines Area run by MQM
unit in-charge Javed Langra. Dacoits in interior Sindh operating from Katcha
and Katcho areas, patronized by Waderas, Patharidars (front men of Sindhi
feudal lords) and some sitting ministers had paralysed road movement. It was
decided by the then government of Nawaz Sharif to employ the Army in Sindh to
restore normalcy. However, since the MQM was a coalition partner of PML-N in
the Centre and in Sindh, it resisted the move.
In keeping with the reservations of MQM, HQ 5
Corps was tasked to undertake ‘Operation Cleanup’ in interior Sindh against
dacoits on May 20, 1992. It came under tremendous pressure at the very outset
as a result of fall out of an unfortunate incident in village Tando Bahawal in
interior Sindh in which one Major Arshad in league with local landlord who had
personal feud with another group killed nine villagers under the plea that they
were dacoits. Although the officer was tried and hanged to death but it had its
negative impact on the Army. This together with death of two Sindhi Patharidars
in the custody of law enforcement agencies and release of firebrand APMSO
leader Shahood Hashmi put the Army image in the dock. The PPP and Sindhi
nationalist parties complained that ‘Operation Cleanup’ was not even-handed
since it was directed against the Sindhis only whereas the law and order
situation in Karachi and Hyderabad was much worse. They had not overcome the
grief of hanging of their popular leader ZA Bhutto and had held Gen Ziaul Haq responsible
for it.
When propaganda snipes against the Army became
pungent and its image started getting affected, the ISPR was asked to check the
downslide. When the then DG ISPR Maj Gen Jahangir Nasrullah retracted from
undertaking this onerous job and dragged his feet, COAS Gen Asif Nawaz Janjua
nominated me as Army Spokesman and deputed me to proceed to Karachi on
attachment with HQ 5 Corps to handle the media. I was performing the duties of
Director of a sensitive directorate in early 1990s in GHQ. In a very short time
I had revolutionized this dormant organization and earned appreciation from all
and sundry including the Army chief.
I was required to build rapport with
rural-urban Press and win their confidence, put an end to speculative
sensationalism by media and build up image of Army. Despite having no past
experience and devoid of any where-withal, I conducted series of Press
briefings most befittingly in the charged atmosphere of Sindh and received
generous praises from all quarters. Having filled the communication gap and
developed a rapport with the Press mafia, the image of the Army ascended sky
high. 47 countries gave live coverage of my Press briefings on progress of
operations in rural-urban Sindh in a very positive manner. I wrote
comprehensive reports on dynamics of rural-urban divide and also briefed the
COAS when he visited Karachi. In view of my good performance, 5 Corps Commander
had sought two months extension for me.
A team of Rawalpindi journalists arranged by
DG ISPR were given a sponsored tour of interior Sindh and Karachi in mid July
1992. A special C-130 aircraft was arranged for them. Although primary purpose
was to provide them firsthand knowledge about progress of ‘Operation Cleanup’
particularly in interior Sindh, however, in actuality the left out ISPR wanted
to demonstrate its activity. The journalists spent two nights in Panu Aqil
where they were given comprehensive briefing and tour to Katcha Area by GOC 16
Division Maj Gen Salim Arshad. Their next stop was in Hyderabad where they were
briefed by GOC 18 Division Maj Gen Lehrasab Khan. They were taken to Katcho
Area as well. The journalists were brought to Karachi on the evening of July 16.
A busy schedule was
chalked out for them for 17th, which included briefing by GOC 5 Corps Reserve
Maj Gen Salim Malik, tea break, briefing by Chief Minister in CM Secretariat
followed by lunch and dinner in Corps Mess. Lt Gen Naseer Akhtar, Corps
Commander 5 Corps instructed me to brief the journalists on his behalf. When I
explained to him that after comprehensive briefings of three GOCs, there will
be little for me to brief, he asked me to take on questions of the visiting
journalists after the briefing by Maj Gen Salim Malik.
Maj Gen Salim Malik gave out comprehensive
briefing in his HQ at Malir Cantt on July 17, 1992, in which he highlighted the
pathetic law and order situation of Karachi that had prevailed prior to June 19 and that Karachi had been
made into a State within a State. He apprised them of the progress made with
regard to recovery of arms and discovery of torture cells and curtailment of
practice of car snatching, robberies and extortion and concluding that writ of
government had been restored to a large extent. He then invited questions from
the journalists.
It looked quite out of place for me to come on
the rostrum and conduct another session of question/answer. This anomaly was
noticed by the journalists and one of them pointed it to me in a sarcastic tone
during tea break. During brief question/answer session, a slimy question on
Jinnahpur was asked by one of the journalists. He said, “There are some reports
that MQM had plans to establish ‘Urdu Desh’ or ‘Jinnahpur’. Is there any truth
in these reports published by a section of press?” I replied, “We had also read
such reports in the newspapers. Some posters showing sketch of Jinnahpur or
Urdu Desh along with some other material were recovered by security forces from
a unit office of the MQM in Kotri”. He further asked if I could elaborate as to
whom all could be behind it. I said that I know as much as you know but some
elements within MQM might have been toying with the idea.
My main source of information about Jinnahpur
was based on information I gathered from GOC 18 Division Maj Gen Lehrasab Khan
who later became Corps Commander 5 Corps in 1994. During my visit to Hyderabad
on June 24, 1992 for my Press briefing he informed me that law enforcing
agencies had recovered Jinnahpur maps with some documents in a raid on unit
office of MQM at Kotri. He looked visibly disturbed while giving me the news. Jinnahpur
maps had been displayed in Hyderabad in past also. Late Benazir Bhutto’s
several statements to the media and in a seminar on Sindh about Jinnahpur in
early July 1992; interview of MQM Haqiqui leader Aamir Khan published in Weekly
Taqbeer July 2, 1992 and in Akhbar-e-Jahan July 13-19, 1992 were in the back of
mind. Another Haqiqui leader Afaq Ahmed had
stated that reason for his group to part with Altaf group was that they had
plans to divide Sindh and disintegrate Pakistan.
What I said was magnified and distorted and
flashed as headlines in the next day’s newspapers. Each newspaper gave out
twisted presentation to what I had said. Headings of each newspaper of July 18,
1992 differed from each other. Sidelining the briefing of Gen Malik,
question/answer session conducted by me was given prominence. They picked up
and covered the story in their own way and suiting their pre-dispositions. The
media in its motivated errand put such words into my mouth which were never
uttered by me in the manner as projected. A bland answer to a question was
sensationalized out of all proportions. I had never said that Jinnahpur would
be a separate country. I did not utter the word Hong Kong, acting as a model
for Jinnahpur. I did not refer to MQM as a political party, which was pursuing
the idea of secession or working for the establishment of an independent State.
I did not say that the Army intelligence had confirmed reports on MQM’s
pursuits for Jinnahpur.
I will narrate reporting of some of the
newspapers of July 18, 1992:- Jang said: Altaf Hussain planned to make Karachi
as a separate State on the model of Hong Kong. The News chanted, ‘MQM planned a
separate homeland’. The Muslim hymned, ‘MQM was out to dismember the country’.
The Watan chimed, ‘MQM had plans for establishment of Urdu Desh’. Evening
Special Karachi screamed, ‘The proof of MQM complicity in conspiring to create
Jinnahpur or Urdu Desh found’. While some newspapers reported Jinnahpur out of
geographic limits of Pakistan, others elected to create it within the
territorial frontiers of Pakistan. Notwithstanding sensationalism, no newspaper said that a map of Jinnahpur was
presented by me.
I procured a copy of this map and related
documents from HQ 5 Corps on the afternoon of July 18, 1992, that is, a day
after Maj Gen Salim Malik’s Press briefing for my record on advice of Maj Gen
Jamshed Malik. The sponsor of the map was Faruqul Hassan Jillani, an MQM unit
office in-charge at Kotri. The map had been sent to HQ 5 Corps with copy to MI
Directorate by OC Field Survey Section Hyderabad under HQ 18 Division.
A rejoinder/clarification was jointly prepared
by me, my GSOI Lt Col Arshad Alwi, PRO Lt Col (now retired Brig) Saulat Raza, DGPR
Salim Gul and ex Director ISPR Brig ® T.M. Siddiqui. It was formally approved
from the VCGS Maj Gen Jamshed Malik, CGS Lt Gen Farrakh Khan as well as the
A/DG ISPR Brig Iqbal. The same was not cleared from the Corps Commander 5 Corps
Lt Gen Naseer Akhtar since he had left for Rawalpindi to attend funeral of the
Military Secretary Lt Gen Javed Burki on 19th morning in Army Graveyard
Rawalpindi. The rejoinder was handed over to the PRO Maj Chishti (now retired
Lt Col) on the afternoon of July 18, 1992 for publication in the newspapers.
However, to my utter surprise I found that the same had not been published in
the following day’s newspapers since Gen Naseer Akhtar forbade Maj Chishti to
do so.
According to Chishti, when he informed Gen
Naseer on the evening of July 18 that the clarification was being given to the
Press after getting necessary clearance from the VCGS, CGS and ISPR, he
retorted back angrily that he had obtained the blessing of the COAS and that
whatever already published in the newspapers on Jinnahpur would stay in the
same form. He warned him that many heads would roll if any kind of
clarification was published in the print media. In other words, I was to be
made a scapegoat. The rejoinder was killed at 1 a.m. on
the night of July 18/19.
The PRO without intimating to me rescinded it. Had this clarification been
printed, the whole matter would have come to rest and this would not have
turned into a chronic controversy. The rejoinder got accidentally published in
Observer Lahore of July 19, 1992 much to the annoyance and chagrin of many.
Since I was to return to Rawalpindi on
completion of my duty on the afternoon of July 19, as such I could not
even hold a Press briefing to straighten the record. The Press was at liberty
to fabricate the story in true yellow journalistic spirit and kept on playing
with it without a breather. PPP leading the opposition in collusion with a
section of media exploited the issue to the hilt. From July 18, 1992 onward,
yellow journalism kicked up unwarranted polemics by design. The insinuations
did not stop there but proposed a toast to the Army which was full of muck and
moist for the Army’s image as it suggested an unholy alliance between the
vested interests and the Army. The Press guns remained trained on me and my
name lugged into the gunk. Absence of clarification ostensibly was being
regarded, quite contrary to the truth, that whatever the tabloids had printed
was correct.
The ‘Nation’ of July 21, 1992 reported
Commander 5 Corps having presented a map of Jinnahpur and his revelation of
MQM’s secession plan to create a separate Urdu Desh/Jinnahpur during the July 20,
1992 Corps Commander Conference at Rawalpindi. In actuality, he had showed the
said map to the then PM Nawaz Sharif and President Ghulam Ishaq Khan during
their visit to GHQ on July 20 for their information since the two were upset
over the publication of news item of July 18 and did not want this
issue to come to light. Political will of the leadership had by then sapped as
was evident from the meeting of Nawaz Sharif with Altaf Hussain in London who
was in self-exile.
The Jang Lahore newspaper carried a news item
along with a map of Jinnahpur on October 11, 1992. It said documentary evidence
in the form of Jinnahpur plan hatched by the MQM, comprising Karachi,
Hyderabad, Thatta, Badin and areas of upper Sindh, had been presented to the
government by the Army. The Opposition pressed for a debate on Jinnahpur. Dawn
of October 15, 1992 reported about two separate adjournment motions moved by
the PDA and Jamaat-e-Islami to discuss the conspiracy. Chaudhri Nisar Ali
stated on October 17 that Jinnahpur plot did not exist. ANP leader Ajmal Khattak also
reiterated that there was no truth that MQM planned to create Jinnahpur State.
The print media remained ablaze with Jinnahpur
controversy especially after members of National Assembly went berserk on October
18, 1992 and indulged in obnoxious altercation flouting the norms of the sacred
House. The promethean fire for the Press countenance had been borrowed from the
misdemeanor of Opposition members and certain members of Treasury in the House.
The fiery exchanges of words were expunged by the Speaker of the Assembly.
The News of October 19, 1992 reported that the
Opposition leader late Benazir Bhutto raised the newspaper clippings of July 18 and said as to why no
action had so far been taken on Jinnahpur after the conspiracy had been
revealed by Brig Asif Haroon and why the government was covering it up unless
it was party to the plot. The then interior minister Chaudhri Shujaat had to
take cover behind my lone rejoinder published in Pakistan Observer on July 19, 1992
saying it had been rebutted. He added that Jinnahpur conspiracy was a figment
of imagination of PDA. Farooq Leghari refuted it and sought inquest by high
powered commission. (Dawn - October 21, 1992). Asif Zardari too demanded action
against plotters of Jinnahpur.
Now that the heat came directly on the Army
leadership, the ISPR issued an abrupt denial on October 19 rather than the
already published clarification (Observer Lahore, July 19, 1992), as a
consequence to the Jang news item. The ISPR note said, “The Army denies having
said anything related to Jinnahpur”. This shoddy denial gave heart to the MQM
leaders and they started to make me responsible for everything connected with
Operation Cleanup. I was vilified for being the brainchild behind the creation
of MQM Haqiqui, torture cells and the Jinnahpur map. Ever since, this issue
keeps cropping up in the newspapers.
Deceased Dr. Imran Farooq, a self-exiled
leader of the MQM, addressed an open letter to Gen Pervez Musharraf on November
6, 1999. He was asked to investigate the shameless allegation made by Brig Asif
Haroon in his Press briefing in Karachi in 1992 that the MQM was involved in
creating Jinnahpur (Separate State). I was accused of inviting a team of
handpicked journalists from Punjab to Karachi and presenting a self-made map of
Jinnahpur to them. I was also accused of having this news item published in all
the national newspapers and that the fake and self-made map of Jinnahpur was
provided to the newspapers for publication.
In his book titled “Establishment Ki Seh Jehti
Hikmat Amli’, June 2000, the MQM Party leader Altaf Hussain accused me of
fabricating Jinnahpur conspiracy and making a false Jinnahpur map at the behest
of GHQ. The MQM Head Office opened a web site on my name to implicate me on the
above stated aspects. A video clip of Altaf Hussain address in London shows him
waving a poster asserting that I had fabricated the Jinnahpur map. He mentioned
my name in almost every telephonic address he made from London or any interview
he gave to a visiting journalist from Pakistan. He repeated his false
allegation while giving an interview to Najam Sethi in July 2009, which was
telecast on Dunya news channel. In his telephonic address on August 24, 2009,
he again mentioned my name. ‘Jinnahpur’ phoenix kept raging in the newspapers
for quite some time.
I explained the whole episode to Gen Asif
Nawaz through a detailed minute sheet. I also attached newspaper clippings of July
18, 1992 to highlight the visible slant in their reporting. I mentioned that
the matter was grossly sensationalized; I was not given a chance to render a
rejoinder to the mis-reported news item; it was purposely allowed to stay as it
was and to fester and create foul odor. I strongly recommended that a
comprehensive clarification must be issued so that the future exploitation of
the issue was deterred for good. However, the then CGS Lt Gen Farrakh Khan did
not agree with my contention saying that the (ill-conceived) denial by the ISPR
was good enough. The COAS concurred to his suggestion.
I again raised this issue with Gen Jahangir
Karamat and later apprised VCOAS Gen Muhammad Yusaf. My last letter on the
subject was addressed to Gen Pervez Musharraf dated April 7, 2001. None
bothered to reply me. Gen Musharraf distanced himself from me and denied me job
after my retirement throughout his stay in power. I was hounded out of MQM
dominated KRL where I was employed as Director Education. Jinnahpur controversy
had also come in my way of promotion.
22 years have lapsed but the controversy has
not died down. It was intentionally kept alive by Altaf Hussain and other MQM
leaders to prove that they had been wrongly maligned. On September 26, 2014 he
mentioned me in his 14-point rejoinder to Gen Raheel Sharif and again during
his speech on 27th. While the Army was absolved by the MQM, I was
made the target of MQM. The story was twisted that I had fabricated Jinnahpur
map and especially invited journalists from Punjab to Karachi and handed them
the map along with some documents during my Press briefing on July 17, 1992
stating that MQM was all set to create a separate State of Jinnahpur. Taking
full advantage of the October 19 ISPR denial, MQM leaders have continuously
shed tears of innocence and held me responsible for branding them as traitors.
A perception was created that creation of MQM Haqiqui and seizure of MQM
offices by Haqiqui members on June 19 was masterminded by me. MQM went to the extent
of spreading news that I had invented torture cells in Karachi to defame the
party. I was put on the hit list of MQM.
Debate on Jinnahpur controversy and some other
dead issues was suddenly triggered by ex Director IB retired Brig Imtiaz Ahmad with
certain defined political motives. He provided grist to the hungry electronic
media to re-ignite the issue and give a clean chit to the MQM. Involved in
Mehrangate scandal and Operation ‘Midnight Jackals’ during his stint in ISI, he
was dismissed from Army service on disciplinary grounds. He claimed that there
was no truth in Jinnahpur map and it was a mere drama to defame MQM. Lt Gen ®
Naseer Akhtar lent strength to his assertion. He claimed on Aaj TV on August 23,
2009 that he knew nothing about Jinnahpur map, and that he came to know of it
two days after my Press briefing, that is, July 19, 1992 and it saddened him. The
fact is that I met him in the Corps Operations Room on the morning of July 18th
and I discussed the matter with him. Their contention was not based on truth.
Based on the certificates of ‘not guilty’
issued by Brig Imtiaz and Lt Gen Naseer, Altaf Hussain made a telephonic
address to the emotion packed gathering of his followers on August 24, 2009. He
shed copious tears asserting that their innocence has finally been proven but
at the cost of extreme rigors and loss of over 15000 innocent workers of MQM.
He and other MQM leaders took a new stance that presentation of fabricated map
and describing MQM as anti-State became the basis of Operation Cleanup in urban
Sindh. They forgot that while the operation in Karachi/Hyderabad commenced on June
19, 1992, controversy of Jinnahpur map cropped up one month later on July 18. Ex DGMI Lt Gen ®
Asad Durrani who was serving as IGT&E in GHQ in 1992 said that the map was
certainly not the basis of starting the operation in Karachi.
On the false stance taken by PML-N that
Operation Cleanup in urban Sindh had been initiated by the Army without taking
Nawaz Sharif into confidence, Altaf Hussain countered as to why he did not stop
the operation which resulted in killing of over 15000 activists of MQM at the
hands of security forces. The bogus claim of 15000 killed was made as an
afterthought to portray MQM victim of oppression, to malign PML-N leadership
and gain sympathy of people of Pakistan. Till to-date, list of so-called
Shaheeds has not been provided. Most killings occurred on account of infighting
between the two factions of MQM.
The claims made by Lt Gen Naseer and Brig
Imtiaz were challenged by Maj retired Nadeem Dar. He revealed on Geo Talk Show
of Hamid Mir on August 24, 2009 that he was serving in Rangers in Karachi in
1992 and had raided MQM Headquarters Nine Zero and recovered over 1000 copies
of Jinnahpur map. He dubbed Lt Gen Naseer a liar and corrupt and Brig Naseer as
ill-reputed with a notorious past. He had to pay a very heavy price for the
disclosures. His tragic tale can be seen on his video clips on U-tube. Maj Gen
retired Safdar Ali Khan disclosed on Geo TV on August 30, 2009 that it is a
fact that thousands of Jinnahpur maps had been recovered from MQM offices in
1992 operation. He added that when he was commanding 18 Division in Hyderabad, Pakistan
flag was burnt in 1987 by MQM activists during the public address of Altaf
Hussain. Lt Gen ® Amjad Shouab, whose troops had taken part in Operation
Cleanup, reiterated that he was in knowledge that Jinnahpur maps had been
recovered in Karachi in 1992. Brig ® Saulat Raza, ex Director ISPR confirmed in
a talk show on Geo TV on August 31, 2009 that Jinnahpur maps, flags and
documents were recovered from an MQM unit office in Karachi on June 19, 1992.
Nusrat Mirza, a journalist by profession, who
was heading Mahajir Rabata Committee in early 1990s, revealed in Geo TV talk
show on September 3, 2009, that formation of Jinnahpur State was a tactical
plan of MQM. He said that Altaf Hussain had announced in a meeting in his
presence that if operation was launched against MQM, they would seek outside
assistance. He confirmed existence of torture cells. MQM senior leader Haider
Abbas Rizvi was part of the talk show. I was interviewed by Dr Shahid Masood
from London on Geo TV on August 31, 2009 in Meray Mutabiq program in which I
highlighted all the details. My interview was not presented accurately in ‘The
News’ dated September 2, 2009. I also wrote my side of the story which was
published by various newspapers/websites titled ‘Jinnahpur Controversy’ in
September 2009 and ‘Brouhaha over Jinnahpur Conspiracy’ in January 2010. My
former article has been hijacked from all websites by unknown hands. My yahoo
email was twice hijacked.
Whatever the significance of the said map, the
fact of the matter is that it made no impact on the political standing of MQM.
Maps have never been made into an issue by any ruling regime or the Army. MQM
has remained in power in coalition with both PML-N and PPP both in Sindh and in
the Centre in all the successive governments. But for May 12, 2007 bloodbath in
Karachi, MQM would have captured few seats from Punjab in 2008 elections and
become a national party, particularly after it won seats in AJK and
Gilgit-Baltistan. Altaf and other MQM leaders have been off and on giving
questionable statements like division of Sindh, or creation of a separate
province for Muhajirs, or opting out of concept of Pakistan if demands were not
accepted. These utterances fall within the framework of Jinnahpur. Altaf’s
infamous speech in India in 2001 where he lamented the division of India and
declared Quaid-e-Azam’s quest for Pakistan a big mistake is on record. The MQM
is for the first time feeling cornered owing to multiple internal and external
pressures. Dr Imran Farooq’s murder has become the biggest cause of worry to
MQM leadership. Altaf is vainly using all sorts of theatrics to regain MQM’s importance
and nuisance value, but things have changed and its iron grip over Karachi is
weakening.
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