Shahbaz Taseer reunites with family in Lahore after years in captivity

Shahbaz Taseer took off on a special aircraft from Samungli Air Base in Quetta


Afp/Babar Naveed/news Desk March 09, 2016
Shahbaz Taseer being flown home (Lahore) from Quetta in a special aircraft by int officials. PHOTO: ISPR

Assassinated Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer’s son Shahbaz Taseer on Wednesday reunited with his family in Lahore after almost five years in captivity.

Shahbaz Taseer was flown from Samungli Air Base in Quetta in a special aircraft to Lahore, a day after he was recovered from Balochistan's Kuchlak area.

Shahbaz Taseer recovered from Balochistan after five years in captivity

The military's spokesperson Lt Gen Asim Bajwa tweeted pictures of Shahbaz arriving in Lahore from Quetta.

"Shahbaz Taseer flown to Lahore, lands and reunites with his family," DG ISPR said.



Bajwa earlier tweeted, "Shahbaz Taseer being flown home (Lahore) from Quetta in a special aircraft by int officials."



Shahbaz was met by family at the airport in Lahore, but did not speak to the press. They left for their home under tight security.

Shahbaz's wife Maheen Taseer also took to Twitter to express "heartfelt gratitude for all your prayers for Shahbaz."



"We're very, very, very happy and this is the start of a new life for us," his sister Sanam Taseer told AFP over the phone. "It's a beautiful day."





"We're so happy," added his aunt Ayesha Tammy Haq.

The circumstances surrounding Taseer's freedom from captivity remain murky.

Shahbaz was recovered by security forces and intelligence sleuths from suburban Quetta Tuesday evening.

The Frontier Corps said Shahbaz was freed in a joint operation by paramilitary troops and intelligence agents from Al Saleem hotel in Kuchlak area. It was an intelligence-based operation which did not yield any arrest, and there was no confrontation with the captors either, said FC spokesperson Khan Wassey.

“We didn’t find anyone [in the hotel]. A single person was there and he told us, ‘my name is Shahbaz and my father’s name is Salmaan Taseer’,” Aitzaz Goraya, the head of the Counter-Terrorism Department of Balochistan, told the media. “He is in feeble health.”

Twitter expresses gratitude after Shahbaz Taseer returns from captivity

“Shahbaz Taseer has been freed,” Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan told lawmakers in the upper house of parliament. “I have just received the information,” he said, but did not say how he was recovered.



According to provincial government’s spokesperson Anwarul Haq Kakar, the raid was carried out between 4 to 5pm in Kuchlak, 25 kilometres north of Quetta. “Shahbaz Taseer is in safe hands now,” Kakar said. “He has spoken to his family by phone. We are making arrangements to send him to his home in Lahore.”

Shahbaz’s recovery came just over a week after his father’s self-confessed assassin Mumtaz Qadri was hanged in a Rawalpindi jail. At the time, Shabaz’s brother Shehryar wrote on popular microblogging website Twitter that Qadri’s hanging was a victory for Pakistan, but not his family. “The safe return of my brother is the only victory my family wants,” he wrote.

Shahbaz was abducted at gunpoint from the Gulberg area of Lahore on August 26, 2011, months after his father was assassinated by Qadri for opposing the blasphemy laws. The silver Mercedes Kompressor (LZT-1) Shahbaz was driving was intercepted by an SUV and a motorcycle on MM Alam Road, hardly 600 yards away from his office. Gunmen dragged him out of the jeep and took him away.

66 tweets that sum up the legacy of Salmaan Taseer

He was reportedly driven by his kidnappers to the Waziristan tribal region where Taliban militants and their foreign cohorts held sway. The family oscillated between hope and fear amid disturbing media reports. At one point some media outlets reported that Shahbaz was killed in a US drone strike in South Waziristan Agency. Then reports emerged that the captors wanted to swap him with Qadri and some militants.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the banned umbrella of militant groups, has never officially confirmed its involvement in the kidnapping, but a militant source told AFP on Tuesday that Operation Zarb-e-Azb had made it ‘difficult’ for the group to keep him. “That’s why they preferred to set him free,” the source added. A second militant source said the TTP had been demanding up to Rs2 billion for Shahbaz’s release.

Security analyst Imtiaz Gul said it was possible a ransom had been paid and that Shahbaz had been abandoned by his abductors once they received the money. The TTP “is a group of mercenaries with clear links to organised crime”, he added.

Shahbaz Taseer abducted from Lahore

Chief Minister Nawab Sanaullah Khan Zehri appreciated the security forces for the successful raid. “Shahbaz Taseer’s safe recovery has proved that our security forces are determined to wipe out terrorism.”

Former prime minister Yousaf Raza Gilani, whose own son Ali Haider Gilani was also kidnapped by militants in May 2013, said: “It is a very big day for the Taseer family.” He added: “After this release, I am very hopeful that my own son will be freed.”

Gilani said the Taliban had conveyed him that they had abducted his son to avenge the military operation in Swat under the previous PPP government.

During his custody, Taseer was moved between locations in the tribal areas and militant outfits, according to multiple rebel commanders.

A Taliban commander in the country's northwest told AFP late Tuesday that Taseer was initially abducted by the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi sectarian group that is mainly based out of Punjab, which handed him over to the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.

"Militants from Lashkar-e-Jhangvi picked him up and then he was handed over to TTP," the commander said.

Taseer spent most of his time with TTP fighters who kept him in separate locations in North and South Waziristan, and in areas close to the Afghan border, he added.

Two other militant commanders said he was later handed over to the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan which maintains close ties to al Qaeda.

The militant sources said Taseer was treated well and played sports with his captors.

"Taseer liked to play cricket and so militants had provided him a bat and ball which he was playing with militants," one commander told AFP.

COMMENTS (25)

Sana | 8 years ago | Reply You sound pretty sick yourself right now @echoboom:
Sana Azhar | 8 years ago | Reply Excuse me ? @Last Man Alive:
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