A month on, Sahiwal tragedy continues to haunt family members

Muhammad Jalil, left with his father Muhammad Bashir. (AN photo)
Updated 16 February 2019
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A month on, Sahiwal tragedy continues to haunt family members

  • Conflicting statements from officials deter case from making any headway
  • JIT to submit it's final report on February 19
LAHORE: First, they shot at the car’s tyres. As one tyre burst, the small Suzuki Alto swerved sharply to the right before spinning fast and finally coming to a halt.
 
Within minutes, armed gunmen in balaclavas emerged from two police vehicles. They pointed their guns at the driver and pulled the trigger for a second time.
 
When the firing stopped, one of the uniformed men dialed a number on his mobile and spoke briefly to someone on the other line even as Khalil, who was sitting in the passenger seat of the Alto, pleaded for mercy. "Let my family live. Take anything you want,” he told the men, holding on tightly to his four-year-old daughter. But as soon as the call ended, there was another round of gunfire.
 
Khalil, his wife, and their 13-year-old daughter died immediately, while their three surviving children -- Umair, 10, Hadia, 7, and Muniba, 4 -- were yanked out of the car before it was sprayed with bullets for the fourth and final time.
 
A stranger spotted the screaming and bleeding children and drove them to a petrol station in the nearby city of Sahiwal, in Punjab. A bullet had grazed Umair’s leg and his four-year-old sister’s hand.
 
An hour later, Khalil’s brother, Muhammad Jalil, received a phone call from Rescue 1122 -- an ambulance service station. They told him to pick up three minor children and four dead bodies from a civil hospital in Sahiwal.
 
“Our neighbors saw the morning news and quickly called us,” Jalil said, adding that "if they hadn’t told us, we would have continued to search for my brother and his family."

This was on the morning of January 19 and the men who were behind the killings -- which took place on a busy thoroughfare outside of Lahore -- turned out to be counter-terrorism officials.

In a written statement to a Joint Investigation Team (JIT) who were tasked with probing the incident, Umair said that the men had abandoned him and his two sisters in the middle of the road, before speeding away.
 
The three children survived only because their parents had used their own bodies to shield them from the gunfire.
 
In a statement released to the press on the same day, Punjab’s Counter Terrorism Department (CTD), a specialized unit of the police, said that it was involved in an “intelligence-based operation” that had resulted in a shootout with “terrorists.”
 
The police report, a copy of which is available with Arab News, states that terrorists were travelling from Lahore to Sahiwal using a family as their cover. The family which was inside the car, it added, was shot at by terrorists travelling on a motorcycle, who fled the scene soon after.
 
However, a video, recorded by a passerby on his cell phone, shows that it was the men in uniform who had been firing at the time. It doesn't show any other motorcycle or an exchange of fire taking place.
In the course of the next few days, the the story's narrative had changed with officials now saying that Zeeshan, the driver, was a terrorist associated with Daesh.
 
Punjab’s Law Minister Muhammad Basharat Raja, who had shared the details, added that he “was carrying explosives, hand grenades and weapons.” Except, another video, captured by an eyewitness, rebuffed the provincial minister's claims. 
 
It shows CTD officers pulling out suitcases -- which Khalil’s family was traveling with -- instead of explosives from the car’s trunk. Yet, the law minister insisted that the operation was “100 percent correct." As for Khalil and his family, they were simply “collateral damage.” The car had tinted windows and the officers could not see inside, Raja said.
 
However, if 10-year-old Umair is to be believed, the officers had a clear view of the car and its occupants in between firings.
 
Now, the law minister said his statement about the operation being “100 percent correct” was misunderstood. Speaking to Arab News, he explained: “The final decision will be made after the JIT report comes. What I said was that it was an intelligence-based operation. The intelligence reports were that there were terrorists in the car. But, it is unfortunate, we have found leads on only one person in the car. The others have no link to terrorists, as per the evidence so far.”
 
Other loopholes have since surfaced in the case as well. The first handwritten police report mentions 16 CTD men who conducted the operation, while only six been arrested till date.
 
When Khalil’s family asked for an attested copy of the police’s First Information Report (FIR) -- to file a petition in the court -- government officials gave them three separate ones, each different from the other and with a different vehicle registration number of the car which the family was traveling in.
 
“The entire incident could be a case of mistaken identity,” Ehtesham Amir-ud-din, the family’s lawyer told Arab News. “In the first FIR, the car they were chasing had the number LER-6663. But they fired at a car with the number plate LEA-6683.” Officials told him it was merely a typing error.
 
When conflicting details of the Sahiwal incident emerged, it triggered a public outcry, with several seeing its as a staged extrajudicial killing which the police in Pakistan are sometimes accused of.
 
For now, the newly-elected government has formed a JIT for a thorough probe. However, Jalil said that it is an exercise in futility as it comprises senior officials from the police and intelligence agencies.
 
“The same force, whose officers are accused of killing our brother, is heading the inquiry. How is that fair?” Jalil said. Instead, Khalil’s family wants the investigation to be headed by members of the judiciary.
 
The official version today is that Khalil and his family are innocent, with Zeeshan being identified was a terrorist.
 
Last month, in a briefing to the Senate, Punjab’s additional chief home secretary told lawmakers that they have recovered an audio recording and a selfie which links 28-year-old Zeeshan to Daesh.
 
Two calls traced to his phone number were made from Afghanistan, where Daesh militants have a stronghold, the secretary added.
 
However, a senator who was part of the address questioned the information and asked how the calls could have been received in the first place. He cited a news report which had quoted Pakistan’s telecommunication body as saying that it would no longer be possible to  make calls directly from Afghanistan to Pakistan.
 
Zeeshan’s family rubbishes the claims. They say he made a living by selling computers. “No one has come to see us. No one has called us to the JIT,” Zeeshan’s mother said from her humble two-bedroom home. “It is like they don’t even want to hear from us."
 
Meanwhile, Punjab's chief minister has ordered for the JIT to submit its final report on February 19. “We have made a commitment,” Raja told Arab News, adding that “the victims will be given complete justice, no matter what needs to be done.”
 
On February 14, a few days before the final report was expected, the head of the JIT, Additional Inspector General (AIG) Syed Ijaz Hussain Shah, told the Lahore High Court that they had not yet interviewed all the eyewitnesses in the case.  “It is sad,” the chief justice of the court said during the hearing, “You are a responsible officer. You should have called all the witnesses by now. We had even provided their phone numbers to you.”  
 
For Khalil's three children, justice delayed continues to be justice denied. It has been three weeks since four-year old Muniba saw her parents killed in cold blood. "She still asks for her mother at night. She doesn’t cry but she doesn’t sleep either,” Muhammad Bashir, Khalil’s aging father said, fighting back the tears streaming down his face.
 
“My son was innocent. His children are innocent,” he said.  

A year after maiming, Cammie the camel walks again with prosthetic limb in Pakistan

Updated 11 sec ago
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A year after maiming, Cammie the camel walks again with prosthetic limb in Pakistan

  • Cammie lost her leg after a landlord in Sanghar attacked her for straying into his field for food
  • A US-based firm built a prosthetic limb for the camel cared for by a Karachi animal shelter

KARACHI: A year after being brutally maimed by a landlord who chopped off her leg in Sanghar district of Pakistan’s southern Sindh province, Cammie the camel walked again Tuesday morning on all four legs with the help of a prosthetic limb, creating a euphoric feeling among her caregivers.

Cammie’s first steps came after a long period of intensive rehabilitation at the Karachi shelter of the CDRS Benji Project for Animal Welfare, which collaborated with a US-based prosthetics firm and received support from the provincial government to provide the young camel with a new limb.

“Today I am ecstatic,” Sarah Jahangir, director of the animal shelter, told Arab News. “I don’t have words for how happy I am seeing Cammie stand up on her prosthetic.”

“I am so proud of my team,” she continued.

Jahangir also expressed gratitude to Senator Qurat-Ul-Ain Marri and her sister, Shazia Marri, a provincial lawmaker in Sindh, for their support.

“I can’t thank both enough for rescuing Cammie, and trusting us and supporting us wholeheartedly.”

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Cammie had wandered into a private field in Sanghar last year in search of food when a landlord, enraged by the intrusion, hacked off her front leg with a sharp weapon.

The incident led to public outcry that forced the state to intervene. Authorities filed an animal cruelty case against the landlord, arresting five people under Pakistan’s rarely enforced animal rights laws.

The prosthetic leg, specially designed by Virginia-based Bionic Pets, was delivered two months ago. Cammie’s medical team had waited for both her physical wound to heal and for her mental readiness before fitting the limb.

“She was a very scared, nervous little child,” said Sheema Khan, the shelter manager, who was crying on Tuesday when Cammie took her first steps with the new leg.

To help her emotionally overcome, Cammie was paired with another rescued camel, Callie, who became her emotional companion. Their friendship proved vital: on the night Callie arrived, Cammie stood up on her own for the first time in months.

However, the wounded camel couldn’t walk until the moment arrived on Tuesday morning.

“Seeing Cammie stand on her own is vindication of months of dedicated hard work,” Senator Qurat-Ul-Ain Marri told Arab News.

“When this tragic incident first occurred, my sister, the elected MNA from Sanghar, was appalled… With the help of the Sindh Government and the selfless volunteers at CDRS Benji, we resolved to bring her back on her feet, and today we have managed that. Allah has been most kind.”


Pakistan monsoon death toll rises to 116 after five more killed in last 24 hours

Updated 47 min 47 sec ago
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Pakistan monsoon death toll rises to 116 after five more killed in last 24 hours

  • The development comes as authorities warn of more downpours, flooding over the next two days
  • At least 253 people have been injured in rain-related incidents since monsoon began in late June

ISLAMABAD: At least five more people were killed in rain-related incidents in Pakistan in the last 24 hours, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said on Tuesday, taking the overall monsoon death toll to 116 since late June.

In Punjab, two children died after being struck by lightning in Okara, while two others were killed in a house collapse in Bahawalnagar. A man was killed in a house collapse in Sindh’s Hyderabad. At least 253 people have been injured in rain-related incidents since monsoon began in late June.

In its latest report on Tuesday, the NDMA said monsoon currents from the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal were penetrating into central parts of Pakistan and were likely to cause thunderstorm and heavy rains.

“Scattered to widespread thunderstorm/rain with isolated heavy falls and torrential rains at few places is expected over Bahawalpur, Multan, DG Khan, Sahiwal, Lahore, Gujranwala and Faisalabad Divisions,” it said.

“Scattered thunderstorm/rain with isolated heavy falls is expected over the upper catchments of all rivers along with Islamabad, upper Sindh, east Balochistan, Peshawar, Kohat, Bannu, DI Khan, Rawalpindi and Sargodha Divisions.”

The authority said flash flooding due to hill torrents is expected in DG Khan and east Balochistan on July 15-16, while urban flooding is expected in major Punjab cities over the next two days.

The NDMA earlier directed authorities to ensure deployment of emergency teams, improve drainage systems and coordinate closely with local administration. It advised public to stay away from weak structures and electricity poles, avoid unnecessary travel and relocate vehicles and livestock to safer locations.

Monsoon season brings South Asia 70 to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, arriving in early June in India and late June in Pakistan, and lasting through until September.

The annual rains are vital for agriculture and food security, and the livelihoods of millions of farmers. But increasingly erratic and extreme weather patterns are turning the rains into a destructive force.

Pakistan is one of the world’s most vulnerable countries to the effects of climate change, and its 240 million residents are facing extreme weather events with increasing frequency.

In 2022, unprecedented monsoon floods submerged a third of Pakistan and killed 1,700 people, with some areas yet to recover from the damage. In May, at least 32 people were killed in severe storms, including strong hailstorms.


Pakistan regulator unveils gender policy to boost women’s role in corporate, finance sectors

Updated 56 min 50 sec ago
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Pakistan regulator unveils gender policy to boost women’s role in corporate, finance sectors

  • SECP releases draft Women EquiSmart Policy 2025–2028 for public consultation on its official website
  • It focuses on women’s leadership on boards, inclusive workplaces and gender-smart financial products

KARACHI: Pakistan’s top financial regulator on Tuesday launched a draft policy aimed at tackling gender inequality in the country’s corporate and financial sectors, seeking to improve women’s representation on company boards, expand access to finance for women entrepreneurs and make workplaces more inclusive.

The Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) published its Women EquiSmart Policy 2025–2028 for public consultation on its website, calling it the first comprehensive gender framework for regulated sectors such as capital markets, insurance and non-banking finance.

“The draft framework reflects the SECP’s strategic shift from fragmented diversity efforts to a structured, cohesive regulatory approach to gender inclusion, aligned with national priorities and global frameworks,” the regulator said in a statement.

The draft policy is built around six pillars, including women’s leadership on boards, gender-disaggregated reporting, women’s entrepreneurship, gender-smart financial products, inclusive workplace practices and institutional capacity building.

The statement said it identifies policy gaps, proposes timelines and regulatory actions and assigns roles to key stakeholders across the public and private sectors.

While Pakistan has seen efforts in recent years to promote workplace equality — such as corporate codes encouraging gender diversity — these have largely remained voluntary and inconsistently implemented.

SECP’s proposed framework seeks to introduce a more enforceable and measurable approach to gender inclusion.


Pakistan court orders probe into online blasphemy spike

Updated 15 July 2025
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Pakistan court orders probe into online blasphemy spike

  • There has been a spike in cases of mostly young men being arrested for committing blasphemy in WhatsApp groups since 2022
  • Rights groups, police say many are brought to trial by private law firms, who use volunteers to scour Internet for offenders

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistan court ordered a government probe on Tuesday into allegations that young people are being entrapped in online blasphemy cases, following appeals from hundreds of families.

There has been a spike in cases of mostly young men being arrested for committing blasphemy in WhatsApp groups since 2022.

Rights groups and police have said that many are brought to trial by private law firms, who use volunteers to scour the Internet for offenders.

“The government will constitute a commission within a 30-day timeframe,” said Justice Sardar Ejaz Ishaq Khan at Islamabad High Court, adding that the commission is required to submit its findings within four months.

Blasphemy is an incendiary charge in Muslim-majority Pakistan punishable by death, and even unsubstantiated accusations can incite public outrage, lead to lynchings and to families being shunned by society.

A report published by the government-run National Commission for Human Rights in October last year said there were 767 people, mostly young men, in jail awaiting trial over blasphemy allegations.

“This is a huge ray of hope and it’s the first time that the families have felt heard,” said lawyer Imaan Mazari, who represents the families of arrested men and women, of the court order.

“Youngsters have been falsely roped into cases of such a sensitive nature that the stigma will last forever even if they are acquitted,” she added.

A 2024 report by Punjab police into the sudden spike in cases, that was leaked to the media, found that “a suspicious gang was trapping youth in blasphemy cases” and may be motivated by financial gain.

The Legal Commission on Blasphemy Pakistan (LCBP) is the most active of lawyers groups prosecuting young men in Pakistan.

Sheraz Ahmad Farooqi, one of the group’s leaders, told AFP in October that “God has chosen them for this noble cause.”

In recent years, several youngsters have been convicted and handed death sentences, although no execution has ever been carried out for blasphemy in Pakistan.

“We will fully support the probe commission and are confident that our voices will finally be listened to, our concerns will be heard, and the truth will come out,” the relative of one of the accused, who asked not to be named because of the backlash, told AFP.


‘World’s oldest marathon runner’ dies aged 114 in road accident

Updated 15 July 2025
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‘World’s oldest marathon runner’ dies aged 114 in road accident

  • Fauja Singh gained global fame after taking up long-distance running at 89, completing marathons past 100
  • Tributes pour in for Sikh athlete who inspired generations with message of resilience, fitness and faith

NEW DELHI: India’s Fauja Singh, believed to be the world’s oldest distance runner, has died in a road accident aged 114, his biographer said Tuesday.

Singh, an Indian-born British national, nicknamed the “Turbaned Tornado,” died after being hit by a vehicle in Punjab state’s Jalandhar district on Monday.

“My Turbaned Tornado is no more,” Fauja’s biographer Khushwant Singh wrote on X.

“He was struck by an unidentified vehicle... in his village, Bias, while crossing the road. Rest in peace, my dear Fauja.”

Singh did not have a birth certificate but his family said he was born on April 1, 1911.

He ran full marathons (42 kilometer) till the age of 100.

His last race was a 10-kilometer (six-mile) event at the 2013 Hong Kong Marathon when 101, where he finished in one hour, 32 minutes and 28 seconds.

He became an international sensation after taking up distance running at the ripe old age of 89, after the death of his wife and one of his sons, inspired by seeing marathons on television.

Although widely regarded as the world’s oldest marathon runner, he was not certified by Guinness World Records as he could not prove his age, saying that birth certificates did not exist when he was born under British colonial rule in 2011.

Singh was a torchbearer for the Olympics at Athens 2004 and London 2012, and appeared in advertisements with sports stars such as David Beckham and Muhammad Ali.

His strength and vitality were credited to a routine of farm walks and a diet including Indian sweet “laddu” packed with dry fruits and home-churned curd.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid tribute on social media.

“Fauja Singh was extraordinary because of his unique persona and the manner in which he inspired the youth of India on a very important topic of fitness,” said Modi on X

“He was an exceptional athlete with incredible determination. Pained by his passing away. My thoughts are with his family and countless admirers around the world.”