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On this day, 8th January 1993: Pak Army Chief, General Asif Janjua, dies in mysterious circumstances

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — In a mystery worthy of Agatha Christie's improbably Byzantine plots, a Pakistani army general has returned from the dead to cast a shadow over the country's election campaign.

The army officer, Gen. Asif Nawaz, was the chief of the army when he collapsed Jan. 8 after working out on a treadmill at his home. He died later at an armed forces hospital, and army doctors said they thought the 56-year-old had suffered a heart attack.

But Nawaz's widow, Nuzhat, became obsessed with the idea that her husband had been murdered. "I am convinced my husband was poisoned," she said in an interview with The Times. "I don't know who did it, but it was not a heart attack."

Benazir Bhutto, a former Pakistani prime minister who is leading the Pakistan People's Party in today's general elections, has made Nawaz's death an issue in the campaign, charging that he was murdered by political opponents. The fact that one of the general's brothers is a candidate in Bhutto's party has underscored the political nature of the allegations.

Bhutto is widely considered the front-runner to defeat her main opponent, former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who was in power at the time the general died.

Asked about the general's death after a campaign rally this week, Sharif replied tartly: "I just know that he died in office. (It's) sad."

Violence has been a prominent feature of Pakistan's political landscape ever since the country's first prime minister, Liaquat Ali Khan, was assassinated in October, 1951. Bhutto's father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was hanged by the army, and the man responsible, Gen. Zia ul-Haq, died in a suspicious plane crash in August, 1988.

Following the allegations of murder in the Nawaz case, Sharif convened a Supreme Court panel to investigate. The panel determined--apparently without an autopsy--that he died of natural causes.

Mrs. Nawaz was undeterred, however, and said she found a sample of her husband's hair on a hairbrush and sent it off to a medical laboratory in Willow Grove, Pa.

The lab's report showed that Nawaz had 67 micrograms of arsenic in his hair, compared with a normal reading of 4 micrograms. "The arsenic . . . is within the range which can be considered toxic," the lab report said.

The report caused a political uproar in Pakistan, because two successive governments had avoided exhuming the body and conducting a proper autopsy.

Finally bowing to pressure, Pakistan's caretaker government last week flew in three foreign doctors to perform an autopsy. Elaborate precautions were taken to conceal their identity.

The government said the results will not be released until after the elections.

If the general was murdered, there would be no shortage of possible suspects.

Among them are the leadership of the Mohajir Qaumi Movement, a political party representing Muslim refugees from India. The party is dominant in Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, but has been accused of carrying out terrorist attacks.

http://articles.latimes.com/1993-10-06/news/mn-42835_1_general-pakistan-elections
 
was reading about him the other day.

apparently, he was one of the only liberal generals that ever existed. He made sure taht the army had no role in politics.

Just for that, i have huge respect for this guy. May he rest in peace
 
Are Janjuas like really big in Pakistan?
My brothers from a different religion.
 
Big as in well known? No, nobody cares.

You live in America therefore your opinion on this is as useless as Trump's daily tweeting.
Janjuas in Punjab are historically a well known powerful tribe having ruled the region for many centuries. Quite a few of them served in the high ranks of Pak army as well including the gentleman on whose name the thread has been created. I have heard Amir Khan the boxer is one as well.
 
You live in America therefore your opinion on this is as useless as Trump's daily tweeting.
Janjuas in Punjab are historically a well known powerful tribe having ruled the region for many centuries. Quite a few of them served in the high ranks of Pak army as well including the gentleman on whose name the thread has been created. I have heard Amir Khan the boxer is one as well.

Just cause I grew up in America doesn't mean I don't know anything about Pakistan and the culture. My point is that we're not as caste obsessed and I don't see why posters from India always bring up castes in every other thread and get hung up over last names. I don't think his caste is relevant to the thread.
 
Just cause I grew up in America doesn't mean I don't know anything about Pakistan and the culture. My point is that we're not as caste obsessed and I don't see why posters from India always bring up castes in every other thread and get hung up over last names. I don't think his caste is relevant to the thread.

Well I particularly am quite interested in castes and tribes of Indian subcontinent hence the question.You could have easily chose ignore it if it offended you in any form.
 
This was big news back in the day. His corpse was exhumed for the autopsy to be performed, and in the end it was concluded that the arsenic in the hairbrush was because of his hair dye.

That didn't really put the rumors to bed. The Ruling Troika, as it was known, comprising GIK, Nawaz Sharif and Janjua, had spent the better part of 1992 conspiring against each other, and rumors were rife that Janjua was plotting a coup. Upon his appointment, he was asked if he would take orders from the PM, and he said that when you have half a million men at your beck and call, you don't take orders from anyone.

For a few months, Nawaz and GIK continued their feud, and it looked like Nawaz was the sole beneficiary of Janjua's death, and therefore must've been complicit in it. Eventually, Janjua's successor General Kakar sent both Nawaz and GIK home.
 
Really odd thing to happen. After Zia's death, this was another 'unsolved' mystery!
 
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