Senior Superintendent of Police Rao Anwar and another policeman were suspended after an uproar on the social media as friends and relatives of Naqeebullah Mehsud, 27, who hailed from North Waziristan, disputed the claims that he was a commander of the outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Dawn reported.
The committee found that Mehsud had a shop in Sohrab Goth area in North Waziristan and was looking for a career in modelling and acting.
Inspector General of Police (IGP) Sindh A D Khawaja told the court that after the FIR was lodged against Anwar, the police had traced his location to Islamabad. However, the IG was unable to tell the chief justice the current whereabouts of the former SSP.
Khawaja claimed that the police had "tried their best" to arrest Anwar but had so far been unable to do so.
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On being asked when the police would be able to arrest and produce Anwar in court, Khawaja remained silent.
However, the CJP assured him that the court trusted the Sindh police and urged him to allow the joint investigation team and the police to continue with their investigation.
The three-member police committee, investigating the encounter under AIG Sanaullah Abbasi, submitted its report in the court today saying that the incident "appears to be a coordinated fake encounter".
The report said that Mehsud was picked up from a tea hotel on Abul Hassan Isfahani Road along with two friends, Hazrat Ali and Qasim.
The report said that no evidence of Mehsud being a terrorist or a criminal was found and the report presented by Rao Anwar on the deceased's activities was actually of a different person who goes by the same name.
It note that though the former SSP Malir claimed to have conducted the tainted Mehsud 'encounter' on intelligence reports, no evidence was available to corroborate this claim.
The report also said that while Rao claimed he was not present when the encounter happened, call records show he was at the site of the encounter when it happened.
The report revealed that 444 people were killed in encounters conducted under Rao Anwar, who was appointed in Malir four years ago.
It also found that "there is extreme fear prevailing among witnesses who are fearful of their security" and as a result "afraid to cooperate during inquiries and investigations against police."
Officials from the Civil Aviation Authority had also been summoned and were ordered by the CJP to submit a report in the next hearing on whether the former SSP had flown out of the country on a private plane.
An anti-terrorism court in Karachi on Saturday remanded six policemen into police custody for five days in connection with Mehsud case.
Sub-inspector (SI) Yaseen, Assistant Sub-inspector (ASI) Supurd Hussain, ASI Allahyar and others were among those remanded in connection with the 'encounter'.
SP (Investigation) Abid Qaimkhani said that the accused have "accepted" their crimes during an initial investigation.
Following protests from the deceased's family and friends, the Sindh police chief had ordered an inquiry into the matter and asked a committee to submit a report.
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