Controversial leader of Pakistan’s MQM ‘arrested’ at London home

60-year-old man arrested on suspicion of money-laundering, says Scotland Yard

Seen through a metal fence, uniformed British police stand guard outside the house of Pakistani politician Altaf Hussain yesterday in north London. Photograph: AP Photo/Alastair Grant
Seen through a metal fence, uniformed British police stand guard outside the house of Pakistani politician Altaf Hussain yesterday in north London. Photograph: AP Photo/Alastair Grant

Altaf Hussain, the controversial leader of Pakistan’s Muttahida Qaumi movement, has been arrested at his home in London, according to his office in Edgware.

Scotland Yard did not name Mr Hussain, but said a 60-year- old man was arrested on suspicion of money-laundering. The arrest took place in northwest London, it said, adding officers were searching the property.

Mr Hussain is the chief of the MQM, Karachi’s most powerful political party. He effectively runs the Pakistani megacity by remote control from his home 4,000 miles away.

The MQM represents the interests of Pakistan’s Muhajirs, the Urdu-speaking descendants of Muslims who moved from India to Pakistan during partition in 1947. It has been a key, but frequently troublesome, coalition partner to successive Pakistani governments.

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A British citizen, Mr Hussain has lived in exile in the UK since 1991. News of his arrest led to an immediate lockdown in Karachi, with shops and businesses in the city and other parts of Sindh province closing and streets gridlocked as people tried to get home. The British high commission in Karachi also shut temporarily.

An MQM spokesman denied Mr Hussain had been arrested. “Scotland Yard came. They asked a few questions . . ,” he said, adding: “It was a routine question and answer thing.”

Mr Hussain was not in custody but at his home, he added.

– (Guardian service)