Dr Fahmida rebukes PPP for police politicisation, fears for husband’s life

KARACHI (Staff Report) – Former speaker of the National Assembly Dr Fahmida Mirza on Tuesday broke her silence in a press conference and took the Pakistan People’s Party government to task for poor governance in Sindh and politicisation of the police force. Condemning the police raids on Mirza farmhouse in Badin, she expressed her fears for the life of her embattled husband who has in recent days lost no opportunity to pour scorn on his erstwhile friend and former president Asif Ali Zardari.

Durig a press conference in Karachi, the PPP MNA from Badin appeared hurt and angry with her party, but stopped short of lashing out at the party leadership unlike her husband. However, she considered Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah as responsible for the tension, and the demands she made during the press conference suggested that she no longer trusted her own government in Sindh.

“I am unable to understand what’s going on as despite the protective bail granted by the Sindh High Court to Dr Zulfiqar Mirza, the Mirza Farmhouse has been under a police siege,” she said. “I demand that the chief justice of Pakistan and the SHC take notice of this. The situation is turning from bad to worse with every passing moment.”

She feared for husband’s life and demanded that “apolitical officers” be selected to handle the situation. “Is it unjustified to ask for a neutral SP?” she asked.

She said the Sindh police had become “highly politicised” and asked the federal government to appoint a “strong and competent inspector general for the province”.

“It must be disclosed that at whose behest raids are being conducted in Badin,” she said. “It’s the responsibility of the Sindh government to find out the truth and make it public. The people of Badin are forced to live under siege as they have been deprived of water, food and every basic facility of life.”

She termed the situation in Badin worse than that of 1997 when the then government was pursuing “false corruption cases against the Mirza family” and forced their workers and supporters to go into hiding.

“We (the Mirza family) are not being provided adequate security despite serious threats,” she said. “Everyone should know that whatever the objective of this entire situation is, the repercussions of this exercise would not only affect Sindh. It would have a national level impact.”

The MNA went on to say that she is worried about the security of her husband, “I am going to Badin for the sake of my supporters and Zulfiqar Mirza”.

She further demanded the government of appointing neutral police officers in Badin to normalise the situation.

Meanwhile in Badin her husband remained embroiled in a tense stand-off with police who demanded that suspects nominated in FIRs lodged recently and allegedly holed up in the Mirza Farmhouse be handed over to them while Dr Mirza told the media that he feared that he would be gunned down in a police encounter just the way Murtaza Bhutto, brother of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, had been shot dead in mysterious circumstances in 1996.

Multiple FIRs were registered against former home minister Zulfiqar Mirza after he manhandled police officials along with his armed supporters on Sunday. Police carried out multiple raids to arrest Mirza but failed to do so.

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