New twist emerges on 'stolen' car that led to killing of Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif in Kajiado

New twist emerges on 'stolen' car that led to killing of Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif in Kajiado

A side-by-side image of a Mercedes Benz Sprinter and a Toyota Landcruiser V8. PHOTO| COURTESY

Four General Service Unit (GSU) officers and one police officer have been interrogated over the mysterious killing of Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif who police claim to have accidentally shot dead on Sunday night while pursuing an alleged stolen vehicle in Kajiado County.

Even as investigations into the controversial murder entered the second day on Tuesday, more questions than answers continue to emerge on the circumstances that led to the killing of the renowned journalist.

Amid the investigation into the killing of Sharif, Citizen Digital has established that the alleged stolen vehicle that police were pursuing is a Mercedes Benz Sprinter van registration number KDJ 700F while the one the Pakistani journalist was travelling in is a Toyota Landcruiser V8 registration number KDJ 200M – two conspicuously different car models.

How police confused a van and a Landcruiser remains anyone’s guess.

Prior to the shooting, a man identified as Douglas Wainaina is said to have reported to detectives at Pangani Police Station that he had left his car in a parking at Ngara area with his son inside, but upon returning to where he had left the vehicle, he could not find it.

According to police, after tracking the vehicle they found that it was within Kiserian area in Kajiado County prompting them to alert their counterparts.

The Pakistani journalist would later be killed under a hail of bullets fired by GSU officers who had mounted a roadblock in pursuit of the alleged stolen car.

In what police termed as a case of mistaken identity, the GSU officers fired nine bullets at the Toyota Landcruiser in which the journalist was travelling in alongside his brother who was the driver.

And in a surprise turn of events, the vehicle that was being traced would later be found by police at a petrol station in Kiserian, with Mr. Wainaina’s 26-year-old son Duncan on the steering wheel.

On Tuesday, the son was presented in court for driving without a license, but his father who was the complainant through, lawyer Elisha Ndemo, withdrew the case.

Meanwhile, the body of Sharif was airlifted to Pakistan for burial, with his family calling for justice.

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Pakistani Arshad Sharif

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