'Thief' Pak blames 'cop' India for Army officer's disappearance

Lt Col Muhammad Habib Zahir mysteriously disappeared on April 6 from Lumbini, a Buddhist pilgrimage site near India's border town of Sonauli, where he had apparently gone for a job interview.

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'Thief' Pak blames 'cop' India for Army officer's disappearance

Foreign Office spokesperson Nafees Zakaria (file photo)

Pakistan on Thursday indirectly pointed fingers on India and claimed that "foreign spy agencies" may have "trapped" and then abducted one of its former army officers.

Lt Col Muhammad Habib Zahir mysteriously disappeared on April 6 from Lumbini, a Buddhist pilgrimage site near India's border town
of Sonauli, where he had apparently gone for a job interview.

Foreign Office spokesperson Nafees Zakaria said Zahir was "trapped" and Pakistan was in touch with Nepal to trace him.

"He was lured after being offered a job... The role of foreign spy agencies cannot be ruled out," he said, without
naming any country.

But words such as "enemy" and "foreign spy agency" by the foreign office are often used to suggest the involvement of
India and its external intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW).

Zahir, who retired from service in October 2014 from the artillery wing of the Pakistan Army, worked for a private firm
but had posted his profile online seeking another employment.

A caller, who identified himself as Mark Thompson, had reportedly contacted Zahir - via email and telephone - for the
job interview and he was provided an air ticket to travel to Nepal.

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An initial probe by Pakistani security agencies has showed that a phone number registered in the UK was computer-
generated to contact Zahir and emails and website domains were registered in India.

From Nepal, Zahir had contacted his family last Thursday and since his phone numbers could not be reached. His last
message from Lumbini read he had reached his destination.

His disappearance has coincided with the death penalty handed down to former India naval officer Kulbhushan Jadhav by
a Pakistani army court for his involvement in "terrorism and espionage". But Pakistan has repeatedly refused India any
consular access to Jadhav.

The sentencing has evoked strong reactions from India, with External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj saying the
country will go out of its way to secure Jadhav's release.

Today, Zakaria warned against linking Zahir's case with Jadhav's as the Indian national was an "irrefutable proof of
Indian state's involvement in terrorism, subversion and terror financing."

"It would be unreasonable on India's part to link the Jadhav case with Zahir," he said.

He said the "R&AW agent was arrested red-handed", who identified himself and has "confessed" in their custody.

The foreign office spokesperson also said four terrorists arrested by Sindh Rangers yesterday from Karachi have
"confessed" to having "links" with the R&AW.

"India remains involved in subversive and terrorist activities and terror financing in Pakistan. Kulbhushan Jadhav
is an irrefutable proof. The arrest of four terrorists by Sindh Rangers, yesterday, is also a case in point," he said.

"Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his visit to Bangladesh confessed to India's involvement in
East Pakistan in 1971," Zakaria said.

Zakaria condemned the killing of what he said were 14 Kashmiris by Indian security forces in the past one week.

He said 250 others were also injured. He called upon the international community to help stop bloodshed in Kashmir.

Nafees Zakaria Pak blames India Pak Army officers foreign spy agencies