UK man found guilty of plot to murder Pakistani blogger

A jury trial convicted Gohir Khan of plotting to kill Ahmad Waqass Goraya after being hired as a hitman


AFP January 28, 2022
Ahmad Waqass Goraya was among five activists who vanished from in early January. PHOTO: FACEBOOK PROFILE

LONDON:

A British man has been found guilty of plotting to kill a Pakistani political blogger in the Netherlands after being hired as a hitman with a fee of £100,000.

A jury trial convicted supermarket worker Muhammed Gohir Khan, 31, of plotting to kill the blogger and liberal activist Ahmad Waqass Goraya after being recruited by middlemen apparently based in Pakistan.

The judge postponed sentencing until March 11.

Prosecutor Alison Morgan said Goraya, who lives with his wife and two children in the Netherlands, appeared to have been targeted for speaking out against the Pakistani authorities in satirical social media posts.

Khan was hired by "others who appeared to be based in Pakistan", Morgan told the jury at Kingston-upon-Thames.

In 2018, Goraya had "received information from the FBI that he was on a kill list", she added, saying he feared an orchestrated attack.

"He believes that some of the threats that he received were from internet trolls” but that others were in fact being led and orchestrated, she alleged.

Also read: UK man had chef's knife to attack Pakistani blogger Waqass Goraya: court

Goraya, who has lived outside Pakistan for more than a decade, did not attend the hearings.

Khan, from east London, was charged in June last year with conspiring with unknown other people to murder Goraya in the Netherlands. He was arrested after returning to the UK by train.

British police liaised with the Dutch authorities to build up a dossier of his encrypted communications with middlemen on WhatsApp and Signal and security camera footage of his movements.

After travelling to the Netherlands on Eurostar, Khan spent days watching Goraya's home in Rotterdam and bought a professional chef’s knife. He returned to the UK after realising the blogger was away.

Khan, who pleaded not guilty at his trial held at Kingston-upon-Thames in southwest London, acknowledged sending the messages and travelling to Rotterdam, but claimed he was only seeking money and never intended to commit the killing.

"He was enthusiastic about carrying out the killing to earn the money and to carry out further attacks in the future," Morgan said.

Goraya has previously reported violent attacks and threats made against him.

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