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Karachi Crime Gangs Protected By Politicians.
By T. Hussain
Karachi, Pakistan,
25 May 2009 (The National) - Criminal gangs with links to key political parties
are terrorising the residents of Karachi, Pakistan's largest city,
according to officials and victims. The most powerful is the so-called "Land
Mafia", who take over commercial plots, government land and even people's homes,
the officials said.
The land mafiosi - who work out of legal fronts such as building, contracting
and real estate businesses - derive their strength from political parties with
constituencies in Karachi and other parts of southern Sindh province such as the
Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), the Pakistan People's Party (PPP), the Awami
National Party (ANP) and the Quaid [PML-Q] and Functional [PML-F] factions of
the [Pakistan] Muslim League [PML]."The Land Mafia is so powerful that it can
overthrow the government by buying politicians and officials", said a judge of
the Sindh High Court, who has heard many land dispute cases, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
Usually the Mafia's intention is to rob people of their property, a typical
method being to establish a fake dispute in which the official land record is
falsified so that the litigants - both members of the Mafia - present fake
documentary evidence of ownership of an empty residence they have paid shanty
dwellers to occupy. "The real owner finds himself excluded from the litigation
and unable to mount a serious legal challenge, because it can only be heard
after the fake dispute is resolved", the judge said, meaning that the real
owners could wait for years before they get a chance to claim for their property.
This unlawful occupation of homes has created a lucrative business for some sons
of political families, who buy the property with its illegal tenants for a
fraction of the home's value. One such budding politician, who asked not to be
named, was recently on a job in Karachi's upmarket Defence Housing Society,
managed by the military. An expatriate family based in the United States were
being extorted by their "tenants" to part with their home for a quarter of its
market value. After a meeting over tea, the young politician magnanimously
turned down the desperate couple's offer of 30 percent, saying it would be
"unfair" to take any more than half the property's value. A deal having been
struck, he jumped in his sport utility vehicle and drove home to pick up four
private guards, each bearing an AK-47 assault rifle, and headed to the disputed
property.
After the land gangs, gun runners occupy the next rung on Karachi's criminal
ladder. They differ from the Land Mafia in that most are allegedly ranking
members of the city's dominant political parties [MQM, PPP, ANP, PML-Q, PML-F],
according to officials. "They are armed to the teeth and with far better
weaponry than the police. That's why political violence flares up in a matter of
minutes in Karachi", said another judge who also sought anonymity.
Police officials said the most powerful gunrunners had access to specialised
urban warfare weaponry, including rocket grenade launchers, laser-sighted
automatic weapons with armour-piercing bullets and phosphorus grenades - the
latter having notoriously been used two years ago in an attack on the Tahir
Plaza, a building next to the city courts. While the phosphorus grenade attack
of May 2007 was targeting lawyers protesting against the sacking of Iftikhar
Muhammad Chaudhry, the since-reinstated Chief Justice of Pakistan, the illegal
weapons trade usually feeds ethnic tensions between Karachi's dominant "Mohajir"
community of migrants from India represented by the MQM and the smaller Pakhtoon
and Baloch communities, represented respectively by the ANP and PPP. The almost
unrestricted flow of weaponry has for three decades rendered many districts of
the city no-go areas for the [Sindh] police, a senior officer in the police said.
Arguably the most dangerous is Lyari, a Baloch-dominated, impoverished district
that has been taken over by the Narcotics Mafia, allegedly led by Rehman "Dakait"
whose assumed surname literally means "bandit" [robber, thief, or dakoo]. Having
allegedly slain his way to the Lyari drugs throne, he has developed close
relations with the PPP, which considers Lyari a safe parliamentary constituency
that has in the past been represented by [evil Satanist] Asif Ali Zardari, now
the [PPP] President of Pakistan. Mr. Rehman [Dakait], who was last year
acquitted on 28 murder charges after witnesses refused to testify, now sits on
the district peace committee, which was involved in negotiating an end to recent
outbreaks of violence. He operates independently of the land and gun mafias, but
is often involved in conflicts with them, police said.
They pointed to armed clashes in Lyari on April 28 [2009] as an example. An
ethnic Mohajir builder had begun construction of a commercial building when
gangsters alleged to be working for Mr.Rehman [Dakait] turned up demanding "protection"
money. Confident of protection from a powerful Land Mafia armed by gunrunners,
he rejected their demands, according to police and residents in the area. "Ten
minutes later, all the construction machinery and workers were gone - taken by
Mr. Rehman's people. Then Land Mafia people, announcing their MQM connections,
arrived and all hell broke loose", said one resident, an ethnic Pashtun who
asked not be identified.
Eleven people were killed and two-dozen wounded in the ensuing 24-hour gun
battle, police said. With ethnic tensions sparking frequent outbursts of
violence in Karachi, police and judicial officers said the provincial [Sindh
PPP- MQM] government was reluctant to take any action that could exacerbate the
security situation. Police living in Lyari and other no-go areas said they
travelled to and from their homes in civilian clothing to avoid being targeted
by gunmen.
"It is too dangerous for us to patrol the areas. We would only go into an area
like Lyari in armoured personnel carriers and that too with support from the
Rangers [a paramilitary armed force]", said one senior police officer.
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