Pakistan Air Force officers tried to kill Musharraf
Monday, November 06, 2006
PAF officers tried to kill Musharraf: UK paper
LONDON: Several young officers from the Pakistan Air Force with access to President Pervez Musharraf’s innermost security circle were among 50 people arrested for trying to assassinate him soon after he returned from a visit to the US and Britain in late September, according to a report published in The Sunday Telegraph on Sunday.
The rocket strike was aimed at the president’s high-security personal residence-office in Rawalpindi. "About 50 people are being held on suspicion of involvement in the September attack, which involved a battery of Russian-made 107 m projectiles launched by a signal from a mobile phone," Pakistani intelligence sources were quoted as saying by The Sunday Telegraph.
"Alarmingly, many are understood to be young officers serving in the Pakistan Air Force, some of whom have access to high-security zones of the presidential offices, parliament and the intelligence service," they said.
The report said that although interrogations had not revealed any of them to have links with Al Qaeda or the Taliban, they were none the less believed to have acted out of growing anger at Musharraf’s alliance with America in its war on terror.
LinkHere
PAF officers tried to kill Musharraf: UK paper
LONDON: Several young officers from the Pakistan Air Force with access to President Pervez Musharraf’s innermost security circle were among 50 people arrested for trying to assassinate him soon after he returned from a visit to the US and Britain in late September, according to a report published in The Sunday Telegraph on Sunday.
The rocket strike was aimed at the president’s high-security personal residence-office in Rawalpindi. "About 50 people are being held on suspicion of involvement in the September attack, which involved a battery of Russian-made 107 m projectiles launched by a signal from a mobile phone," Pakistani intelligence sources were quoted as saying by The Sunday Telegraph.
"Alarmingly, many are understood to be young officers serving in the Pakistan Air Force, some of whom have access to high-security zones of the presidential offices, parliament and the intelligence service," they said.
The report said that although interrogations had not revealed any of them to have links with Al Qaeda or the Taliban, they were none the less believed to have acted out of growing anger at Musharraf’s alliance with America in its war on terror.
LinkHere
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