working on the case full time. Now they are refusing to give a number – the size of the team fluctuates they say – but insist that: “there has been no downgrading of resource dedicated to the task of solving his murder”. It is striking that this is the case at a time when the UK is facing a multiple jihadist plots.
As for the money-laundering investigation the police say it is complex, involving detailed analysis of a large amount of exhibits and extensive financial enquiries both in the UK and internationally. The three men arrested on money laundering charges – Altaf Hussain and two others – have had their bail extended until April.
They are constrained, however, especially in the murder case by the failure of the Pakistan authorities to cooperate with the UK investigations. The UK police are pressing for the release of two suspects – Mohsin Ali Syed and Mohammed Kashif Khan Kamran – who are currently thought to be in ISI custody. Without the two men giving evidence in a UK court it is difficult to see how the UK authorities can pursue the murder case. But despite the request being put directly to the army chief on his recent visit to London Pakistan is showing no sign whatsoever of helping.
Aware that Pakistan’s failure to hand over the two suspects is the main obstacle to progress in the case, many of the UK’s moves over the last four years have been designed above all else to convince Pakistan that the UK is serious about the investigations and that British diplomatic officials are no longer playing politics with MQM. But those efforts have failed.
But that’s not to say that the cases – especially the money laundering cannot be progressed. Given the acute political sensitivities in Karachi, the British police would not have arrested Altaf Hussain for money laundering unless they were sure they could convince the Crown Prosecution Service that there was enough evidence for charges and a trial.
Even if the police would prefer to go to trial on the murder enquiry rather than the money laundering one, their tactics risk sending mixed messages. Many Pakistanis believe the slow pace of the cases means the British Foreign Office and the M16 intelligence organisation are blocking the investigation to protect the MQM. Certainly both organisations have a history of close relations with the MQM. Both have used the party as a way of exerting British influence, not only in Karachi, but in Pakistan more generally.
While some British officials in the past did their best to slow the police investigation down that is ever less likely to happen. Slowly but surely the British foreign office has come to think there will be a trial and a conviction even if only on money laundering charges. Furthermore there is a growing perception in the Foreign Office that the MQM is beginning to disintegrate. As a result the British state is doing much less business with the MQM than it used to.
The delay in laying charges now has nothing to do with the British foreign policy makers protecting the MQM. It’s all to do with the effort to prioritise the murder case over the money laundering one. But the British authorities perhaps put too much faith in the idea that the Pakistan government would respond to the billions of aid the UK has provided by getting some reciprocal cooperation in the Imran Farooq case. Islamabad sees no need to hand over the two suspects and there is no reason to believe it will do so. It cannot be long now before the money-laundering charges will be the only option left.
The writer is a freelance British journalist, one of the hosts of BBC’s Newshour and the author of the new political thriller, Target Britain.
Email: bennettjones@hotmail.com
Twitter: @OwenBennettJone
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