A
Kenyan police watchdog has said it is investigating the
incident, which happened at 10 pm on Sunday evening on the
outskirts of the capital, Nairobi.
A senior police officer told The Star, a Kenyan newspaper, that
the shooting was being treated as a case of mistaken identity.
The circumstances of Sharif's death sparked widespread outrage
in Pakistan and calls for an investigation.
Sharif worked for many years as a prime time television news
show host for ARY News in Pakistan and had recently fled the
country citing threats to his life. It was not immediately clear
when he had arrived in Kenya.
The police report said a relative of Sharif had been driving the
car. It said police had formed the roadblock by placing small
stones across the road, but the car drove through without
stopping, even after officers opened fire. Nine bullets hit the
car, and one hit Sharif in the head.
Kenya's Independent Police Oversight Authority (IPOA), a
civilian watchdog, has started an investigation into Sharif's
killing, IPOA's chairwoman Ann Makori told journalists in a news
conference on Monday.
"There's an alleged police killing of a Pakistani national at
Tinga market, Kajiado county, last evening. Our rapid response
team has already been dispatched," she said.
Pakistan's foreign ministry said its high commissioner in Kenya
was in touch with Kenyan police and the foreign office and a
police report is awaited.
"I lost friend, husband and my favourite journalist," his wife,
Javeria Siddique, said on Twitter, asking for media to respect
the family's privacy.
Sharif's death sparked widespread reaction on social media in
Pakistan from officials, journalists and others.
"I am deeply saddened by the shocking news of journalist Arshad
Sharif's tragic death," Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on
Twitter. The two Sharifs are not related.
Former prime minister Imran Khan also condemned the death and
said Sharif had been murdered for his journalistic work. He
called for a judicial investigation into the incident.
(Reporting by Humphrey Malalo in Nairobi and Gibran Peshimam in
Karachi Pakistan; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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