Former Pakistani leader Pervez Musharraf acquitted of murder

Tribal head killed in 2006 battle between militants and government forces

Former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf has been acquitted in a murder case involving the killing of a nationalist leader in a military operation.

Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti led a tribal campaign to win political autonomy for Baluchistan, Pakistan's biggest province and the richest in mineral resources.

He was killed in a battle between tribal militants and government forces in the restive province in 2006.

Mr Musharraf, who also faces treason charges, was charged with the murder in January last year on the grounds he ordered the killing. But on Monday, an anti-terrorism court in the provincial capital, Quetta, acquitted him.

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"We aren't satisfied with the judgment and will challenge it in court," Sohail Rajput, the lawyer for Bugti's family, told reporters outside the court.

For decades, Baluchistan nationalists have accused Punjab, Pakistan's most populated province, of exploiting their natural resources. Militants have targeted government installations, security forces, gas pipelines, railway tracks and electricity pylons.

Musharraf ordered a military crackdown in Baluchistan in late 2005 after being targeted by a rocket attack while visiting the province.

In late 2006, Pakistani forces killed Bugti and dozens of other rebels at a hideout in Baluchistan’s rugged mountains.

Musharraf has also been charged in connection with the 2007 assassination of prime minister Benazir Bhutto and the murder of a prominent cleric since returning to Pakistan from exile in 2013.

Musharraf was granted bail in the Bhutto assassination and treason cases and remains free, mostly living in Pakistan.

Reuters