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Suspects held for attempt to plant rockets
NEW YORK—A cabal of Pakistani military officials with access to
President Pervez Musharraf’s innermost security circle has been arrested
after trying to assassinate him in a rocket attack.
The strike, aimed at the president’s high-security personal
residence-office in Rawalpindi, took place shortly after he returned
from Britain and the US in late September. Although the president was
not hurt, the attempt demonstrates the political instability engulfing
his nation, which was heightened last week by his government’s bombing
of a madrassa in north-west Pakistan killing 80 suspected militants, The
Sunday Telegraph reports. With hardline religious parties orchestrating
strikes and demonstrations, fears are growing that Gen Musharraf’s
opponents may make further attempts to remove him by force, creating a
power vacuum in the Islamic world’s only nuclear-armed state.
According to Pakistani intelligence sources, about 50 people are being
held on suspicion of involvement in the September attack, which involved
a battery of Russian-made 107 mm projectiles launched by a signal from a
mobile phone. Alarmingly, many are understood to be young officers
serving in the Pakistani Air Force, some of whom have access to
high-security zones of the presidential offices, parliament and the
intelligence service.
Although interrogations have not revealed any of them to have links with
al-Qaeda or the Taliban, they are none the less believed to have acted
out of growing anger at Gen Musharraf’s alliance with America in its war
on terror.
One official said that while the rocket strike itself had been
relatively amateurish, it would have probably been lethal had the
plotters been assisted beforehand by an Islamic terrorist group. Al-Qaeda
has succeeded in indoctrinating young air force officers before. Two
were hanged for their role in planting a 500lb bomb in 2003 blowing up a
bridge that Gen Musharraf’s convoy was traveling over. He only escaped
with his life because electronic jamming equipment on his car delayed
the blast.
A rattled Gen Musharraf has called a meeting with his closest confidants
this week to review personal security. While he relies on the armed
forces to keep him in power, loyalty among the military’s lower tiers
has become increasingly in doubt because of the perception that he has
“sold out” Pakistan to the US and its western allies.
Publicly, officials close to the president deny that he faces any
challenge from within the forces. But privately they now admit that the
personal threat against him is becoming “heavier and heavier”, and are
predicting serious fall-out from Monday’s helicopter strike at the
madrassa in the village of Chinagai, 100 miles north of -Peshawar. The
Pakistani army said the madrassa was an al-Qaeda-linked school, used to
train insurgents fighting across the border in Afghanistan. Gen
Musharraf has been on a hit list for Pakistan’s Islamic militants ever
since he sided with America in the wake of the September 11
attacks.—Online |