• Tuesday, April 23, 2024

News

Missing Pakistan journalist found dead in Sweden

ISTANBUL, TURKEY – SEPTEMBER 08: Old newspapers are seen in the archive department of Cumhuriyet newspaper on September 8, 2017 in Istanbul, Turkey. Cumhuriyet is Turkey’s oldest up-market daily newspaper. Established in 1924 it is one of the few remaining opposition newspapers. Critical of President Erdogan and Turkey’s ongoing slide into authoritarianism, police raided the newspaper in October 2016, after the July 15 failed coup attempt, arresting nearly half of the newspaper’s staff including columnists, cartoonists, reporters, and executives on charges of terrorism and treason. On July 24, 2017 a mass hearing was held and saw seven staff members freed, however five remain in custody and will go on trial on September 11, 2017 in one of Turkey’s biggest press freedom cases. Since the 2016 failed coup attempt Turkey has become one of the world’s largest jailers of journalists, with 800 journalists having their passports and press credentials confiscated, 178 jailed and 173 media outlets shut down according to opposition statistics. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

By: AswathyP

A Pakistan journalist living in exile in Sweden who has been missing since March has been found dead, police said Friday.

“His body was found on April 23 in the Fyris river outside Uppsala,” police spokesman Jonas Eronen said.

Sajid Hussain, from the troubled southwestern province of Baluchistan, was working part-time as a professor in Uppsala, about 60 kilometres (35 miles) north of Stockholm, when he went missing on March 2.

He was also the chief editor of the Baluchistan Times, an online magazine he had set up, in which he wrote about drug trafficking, forced disappearances and a long-running insurgency.

“The autopsy has dispelled some of the suspicion that he was the victim of a crime,” Eronen said.

The police spokesman added that while a crime could not be completely ruled out, Hussain’s death could equally have been the result of an accident or a suicide.

“As long as a crime cannot be excluded, there remains the risk that his death is linked to his work as a journalist,” said Erik Halkjaer, head of the Swedish branch of Reporters without Borders (RSF).

According to the RSF, Hussain was last seen getting onto a train for Uppsala in Stockholm.

Hussain came to Sweden in 2017 and secured political asylum in 2019.

The Pakistan foreign ministry declined to comment when asked about Hussain.

Pakistan Weekly

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