The codeword for the murder of Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) leader, Dr Imran Farooq, was ‘Mamoon Ka Cake Katna Hai’ (cut the cake).’
Moazzam Ali, one of the suspects of Dr Farooq’s during an ongoing interrogation disclosed that the codeword for Dr Farooq was ‘Mamoon’ (maternal uncle).
whereas the final coded was ‘Mamoon Ka Cake Katna Hai’ ‘Dr Farooq is to be bumped off.’
Moazzam told that, in 2010 Moazam Ali delivered a sealed letter to MQM Chief, Altaf Hussain. The letter contained a report about the corrupt party leaders and details of their corruption.
Dr Farooq Sattar, Dr Imran Farooq, and Mohammad Anwar’s names were on the top of the report.
Shakil Umer and Anees Qaimkhani were also among the corrupt leaders mentioned in the said report.
Moazzam claimed that Altaf Hussain gave him an autograph on a 100-rupee banknote –maybe as a receipt.
He also conveyed Khalid Shamim’s message to Altaf Hussain that Dr Imran Farooq was secretly setting up a new political party.
They got their orders to execute Dr Imran Farooq from Anees Qaimkhani.
Only seven people knew about the murder plot of Dr Imran Farooq.
I was told to receive Mohsan Ali Syed and Kashif from Karachi airport
They did not show up so I went back home, Moazzam says…
However, Mohsin told him that he had completed the reconnaissance for the mission.
Earlier, British police arrived in Pakistan to interrogate two suspects in the Dr Imran Farooq murder case.
Imran Farooq, 50, a founding member of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) party, was stabbed and beaten to death in Edgware in northwest London as he returned home from work in September 2010.
Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said Pakistan would help the British police in a transparent investigation.
“We will ensure proper investigation without any prejudice, without any favour,” he told reporters.
The suspects were arrested last week in the southwestern province of Baluchistan near the Afghan border.
“The suspects are in custody of the Frontier Corps in Quetta. We will bring them to Islamabad and assist the British police in the investigations,” the minister said.
Announcing the arrest last week of Khalid Shamim and Mohsin Ali, Pakistan termed it a breakthrough in the case.
British detectives said last May they want to question Ali and another man, Muhammad Kashif Khan Kamran, about the attack. Both were in Britain in the period leading up to it and left hours afterwards.
Critics of the MQM, the most powerful political force in Pakistan’s biggest city of 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.
Farooq claimed asylum in Britain in 1999. He was wanted in Pakistan on 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 MP in Pakistan, but went into hiding in 1992 when the government ordered a military crackdown against party activists in Karachi. (PhotoNews / Agencies)