It's crime if Imran Khan has taken away cypher, says Ahsan Iqbal

Web Desk
October 01, 2022

Ahsan Iqbal said the cypher copy for the PM is missing from the PM House, and it is serious crime if Imran Khan has taken it away

Federal Minister for Planning Development and Special Initiatives Ahsan Iqbal. File photo


Imran Khan committed a serious crime if he took the diplomatic cypher with him, said Ahsan Iqbal, federal minister for planning, development, and special initiatives.

The copy of the cypher which was meant for the Prime Minister of Pakistan is missing from the record of the PM House and it is a serious crime, he told Shahzeb Khanzada in his current affairs programme 'Aaj Shahzeb Khanzada Kay Sath' on Friday.

The crime is so serious that the FBI, in recent past, raided the house of former US president Donald Trumpbecause it was reported that he had taken national documents with him, he noted.

"The cypher has very strict protocols. It is not possible for everyone to see it. Even the officials of the PM House can't witness it."

He slammed the former prime minister, Imran Khan, for leveraging the cypher issue and worsening the country's relations with the US. He said Imran put the entire diplomacy at stake.

Ahsan Iqbal said the theft demonstrates that Imran Khan consistently played with the state's interests.

He said that, according to the information, the secretary to the prime minister had given the cypher to the former prime minister, Imran Khan, but no trace of it was found, later on.

"Either Imran Khan has probably taken the cypher away with him or the investigations will reveal what happened to it," he said.

The programme host queried, "How are you so sure that the cypher was lost or stolen during Imran's era? It might have disappeared over the past four to five months. However, the minister was non-committal and went on repeating the Donald Trump incident, saying his house was raided because he took some national sensitive documents from the White House.

The minister said the cypher's trail from the Foreign Office to the PM House exists as it was received at the PM House. The then-secretary to the PM, who held it, was reported to have said he delivered it to the [former] PM, remarked the minister.

So, if Imran Khan removed the cypher from the PM House, he had committed a national crime, he stressed. "Or, if he [Imran] has done away with it or hidden it, it is again a crime," he said.

"There is no precedent for anyone to have harmed the state so much for the sake of politics as Imran Khan has," he said. "Imran Khan made such a conspiracy that hurt the interests of the country."

Ahsan Iqbal also said that the National Security Committee (NSC) has formed a high-powered investigation committee on the issue of audio leaks. He claimed that the problem of phone call eavesdropping dates back to Imran Khan's time and that the government has created foolproof security procedures to make sure that this never happens again.

The minister responded when asked if the government would call Imran Khan to account for the audio leaks, saying that the intelligence and security agencies have been asked to look into the matter.

Body formed to probe theft of cypher

On September 30, the federal cabinet announced the formation of a committee to investigate the diplomatic cypher that it was told had been “stolen” from the records of the Prime Minister's House, a statement issued by the premier’s office said.

Imran Khan, who was voted out through a no-confidence motion, had brandished a “threat letter”, which was the cypher, on March 27 at a public gathering before his ouster, claiming that his government had been threatened by the US and the Opposition was involved in the conspiracy.

The statement from the PM office, issued after the cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, said that the body was provided with a briefing on the issue of diplomatic cypher where it was revealed that the copy of the relevant document was missing from the Prime Minister House’s records.

“The meeting was told that although there is a record of the receipt of the cypher sent to the former premier at the Prime Minister's House, its copy is not available in the record,” said the statement. As per the law, the cable is a property of the Prime Minister's House, it added.

The statement said that the meeting termed the “theft” of the letter a serious matter and, following a detailed consultation, the cabinet formed a special committee to launch an investigation.


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