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Former Pak army chief being questioned in nuclear sale case
London, Jan 20: General Aslam Beg, former chief of army staff of Pakistan who allegedly tried to sell nuclear technology to Iran for 12 billion dollars, is being questioned in Islamabad, a leading London daily reported today.
The maverick general was held after Abdul Qadeer Khan,
architect of Pakistani nuclear programme, told investigators
during a debriefing that nuclear cooperation with Iran had
been authorised by the army officer, The Times claimed.
Gen Beg, one of a number of senior officers with Islamist
sympathies, was the chief of army staff from 1988-91, the
period during which the country's nuclear secrets were
allegedly passed on to Iran.
Gen Beg, who also served as head of the inter-services
intelligence agency, is said to have tried to persuade the
civilian governments in power during that period to transfer
nuclear technology in return for the money that Iran was
allegedly prepared to pay and which would have underwritten
the Pakistani military budget for a considerable time. The
offer was rejected.
Pakistani authorities have also detained eight other
officials linked with its premier nuclear weapons laboratory.
Among them were two retired brigadiers who until recently had
served as directors at the Khan Research Laboratories (KRL)
and a retired major.
Major Islamul Haq, a close aide and principal staff
officer to Khan, was detained by two intelligence officials
while dining at Khan's house. His wife said she had heard
nothing from him since then.
Bureau Report