Daylight killing of journalist spotlights rising street crimes in Pakistan’s Karachi

A police officer examines a bullet-riddled car of TV producer Athar Mateen, who was killed by robbers in Karachi, Pakistan, Friday, Feb. 18, 2022. (AP)
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Updated 23 February 2022
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Daylight killing of journalist spotlights rising street crimes in Pakistan’s Karachi

  • Athar Mateen is now one among at least 15 people killed in street robberies gone wrong in Karachi since January 1
  • In 2019, 44 people were killed and 282 others injured in street crimes, in January alone this year 10 people were killed

KARACHI: Soon after leaving home early last week to drop his children to school in the Pakistani port city of Karachi, Athar Mateen, a news producer at a local television channel, saw two men on a motorbike robbing a citizen at gunpoint.
Mateen rammed his car into the motorcycle to stop the muggers, who shot at the journalist’s car before stealing a passerby’s motorcycle and speeding away. The news producer died on the spot in his car, just a few hundred meters away from a police station and about a kilometer away from a headquarter of the paramilitary Rangers.
The journalist is now one among at least 15 people killed in street robberies gone wrong in Karachi since January 1 — part of a surge in crime that government officials, victims and experts blame on inaction by law enforcement agencies and low conviction rates by courts for repeat offenders.
Until 2013, Karachi, a city of at least 18 million people, had a reputation as one of the world’s most dangerous places. Then the Rangers moved in to make its mean streets safer in a crackdown that has come to be popularly called the “Karachi Operation” and which saw crime rates plunge and some of the country’s most-wanted men put behind bars.
In recent months, however, crime is back on the streets of Karachi, alarming authorities and citizens who fear for a city that is home to Pakistan’s main stock market, which handles all of the cash-strapped country’s shipping and which generates most of Pakistan’s tax revenue.
“Karachi is once more drowning in fire and blood,” interior minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said in a statement after Mateen’s killing, calling on the provincial government of Sindh, of which Karachi is the capital, to take “strict measures.”




This undated photo shows Athar Mateen, a news producer at a local television channel killed Karachi on Feb 18, 2022. (Photo Courtesy: Social Media)

“Police are no longer in control of the situation in the province,” the minister added.
The chief minister of Sindh, Murad Ali Shah, admitted to a surge in street crime in the last month and a half, and admitted that police and Rangers’ neglect was a major problem.
“I usually visit the city secretly but hardly have seen police and Rangers on the roads or on patrolling duty in the respective area,” he said at an official meeting this week on controlling crime. “This is unacceptable.”
“Where are your station house offers, what are they doing and what is their performance?” he asked, addressing top cops in the city.
A Rangers spokesperson referred Arab News to ISPR, the media wing of the army, for comments for this story. ISPR did not respond to various attempts to seek answers.
Karachi police chief Ghulam Nabi Memon said his force was working hard to curb rising street crimes.
Earlier this month, the Sindh government abruptly removed Karachi police chief Additional Inspector General Imran Yaqoob Minhas after only nine months on the post and replaced him with Memon. Karachi administrator Murtaza Wahab confirmed to Arab News the change was brought about specifically due to a rise in street crimes.
Police figures reveal a mounting problem.
In 2019, 44 people were killed in Karachi and 282 others injured while resisting being mugged or their cars or motorbikes stolen. In 2020, the number rose to 51 dead and 332 injured. In 2021, the number rose further to 72 dead, with 445 people injured.

This year, in January alone, 10 people lost their lives in street crimes gone wrong while 70 were injured. In February, five people, including Mateen, died and over a hundred were injured.
The numbers for carjackings and cell phone theft on the streets have also spiked.
Around 120 cars and 949 two-wheelers were stolen in roadside snatching episodes in 2018 respectively, figures that rose to 235 and 4,388 by 2021 respectively. Around 19,826 cell phones were stolen in street robberies in 2018, and 25,139 in 2021.

As per figures, many of those killed were during cell phone robberies gone wrong.
One of them was Uzma Barkat Ali’s 20-year-old son Osama who was having dinner at a fast-food joint in a North Karachi neighborhood earlier this month when he was shot point blank by street robbers trying to steal his cellphone.
“It was as if the heavens fell down on me,” Ali told Arab News last week. “It’s as if they took my world from me.”
“All I want is justice,” she said. “The killers should be arrested and hanged so they may not kill the Osamas of other mothers.”
Police chief Memon said his force would bring the killers of victims like Osama to justice.
But family members and friends of victims, as well as experts, interviewed by Arab News said they believed “inaction” by law enforcement agencies was a big part of the problem, as were low conviction rates.

Tariq Mateen, the brother of the deceased news producer, blamed “police, Rangers and the Sindh government” for the murder. He said officials were responsible for both “incompetence and connivance” with criminals.
“Street crimes have reached a level where every citizen of Karachi has got extremely frustrated but both police and Rangers are doing nothing,” Farhan Mallick, director news at Samaa TV where Mateen worked, told Arab News. “A Rangers check-post is a few hundred meters away from the place where the incident happened and it speaks volumes about the inaction of law enforcement, who have left the citizens at the mercy of criminals.”




People comfort a relative of TV producer Athar Mateen, who was killed by robbers, in Karachi, Pakistan, Friday, Feb. 18, 2022. (AP)

Mazhar Abbas, a veteran journalist who has covered crime in Karachi for four decades, also blamed police and Rangers inaction for the surge, and said a low conviction rate contributed to the problem. Of 7,179 people arrested in street crimes last year, 3,666 were out on bail and 3,513 acquitted, according to figures from the Sindh government.
 ”It’s the responsibility of both [police and Rangers] to control,” Abbas said. “No crime can happen if police don’t have connivance and they perform their duty.”
He added: “It [rising crime] has more to do with police inaction and lack of prosecution, which gives criminals a sense of freedom to carry out street crimes.”
“It is the weakness of the police that they are not investigating the cases properly,” chief minister Shah said, commenting on the figures.
Police chief Memon acknowledged that “some elements” within the police may have links with criminals but this was at a “small and individual level” and action was taken against such officials. He also outlined new steps being taken by police.
“A safe city authority is to be established but before it gets functional, Sindh police have encouraged private installations like superstores and shops to install CCTVs,” Memon said. “Around 30,000 cameras have been installed during the last couple of years and are being used to identify culprits.”
But Zoha Waseem, an academic with expertise in policing at the University of Warwick, said preventing street crimes required addressing structure problems, such as income inequality, unemployment, class-based discrimination, and a lack of political representation and empowerment of the working class.
“Policing (whether it is through the police or the Rangers) can only be a response to street crime, it cannot prevent it entirely,” she told Arab News. “At most, you can deploy more policing resources to certain areas, for hot spot policing or deterrence and intelligence-collection. This can help reduce crime, but it cannot stop people from committing crimes.”
“Dismantling terrorist groups, ethnic gangs, militant wings, helped reduce a particular type of violent crime,” Waseem said. “Street crime is a different kind of challenge born out of much larger social and economic issues.”


China expresses interest in investing in seed development, precision farming in Pakistan, ministry says

Updated 29 July 2025
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China expresses interest in investing in seed development, precision farming in Pakistan, ministry says

  • The agriculture sector contributes nearly a quarter of Pakistan’s gross domestic product and employs 37 percent of the national labor force
  • A first batch of 300 Pakistani graduates this month also completed training in irrigation, seed production and prevention of post-harvest losses

KARACHI: A high-powered Chinese delegation has expressed “keen interest” in making investments in seed development, precision farming, smart irrigation systems and agro-processing in Pakistan, the Pakistani national food security ministry said on Tuesday.

The Chinese delegation, comprising senior officials, agricultural scientists, and private sector representatives, met with National Food Security Minister Rana Tanveer Hussain to explore enhanced cooperation in the field of agriculture.

The two sides discussed joint strategies to modernize Pakistan’s agricultural sector and to initiate collaborative efforts in research, innovation and investment, with the delegation highlighting China’s agricultural advancements and willingness to transfer expertise.

“Through collaboration with China, Pakistan can introduce scientific research, climate-resilient practices, and modern technology that will uplift the productivity of local farmers and ensure long-term food security,” Hussain told the Chinese delegates, stressing the urgent need to formalize agreements between Pakistani and Chinese agricultural institutions.

The agriculture sector contributes nearly a quarter of Pakistan’s gross domestic product (GDP) and employs 37 percent of the national labor force, according to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization. However, a fast-growing population, climate change and poor resource management have greatly impacted Pakistan’s crops in recent years, prompting officials to ponder alternative ways to enhance production.

Pakistan also decided in June last year to send nearly 1,000 graduates to China to train in methods and techniques to enhance Pakistani agricultural production. Of them, around 300 Pakistani graduates this month completed training in water-saving irrigation, seed production, animal husbandry, agriculture production and prevention of post-harvest losses in China’s Shaanxi province.

During Tuesday’s meeting with Chinese delegates, Hussain proposed signing multiple memorandums of understanding (MoUs) focusing on joint research in areas such as biotechnology, crop improvement, pest control and sustainable agricultural practices, according to the national food security ministry.

He also underscored the importance of establishing long-term frameworks for the exchange of scientists, technical training, and capacity-building initiatives to strengthen Pakistan’s agricultural institutions.

“Hussain noted that this partnership must go beyond investment and move toward structured collaboration in research and development,” the ministry said.

“The Chinese delegation appreciated the Minister’s strategic vision and assured full support from their government and private sector to contribute to Pakistan’s agricultural transformation… The meeting concluded with a shared commitment to elevate the Pakistan-China partnership in agriculture to a new level, ensuring tangible outcomes in the coming months through structured planning and implementation.”


German biathlete Dahlmeier injured after mountaineering fall in Pakistan, reports say

Updated 29 July 2025
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German biathlete Dahlmeier injured after mountaineering fall in Pakistan, reports say

  • The accident occurred on Monday when Dahlmeier was hit by a landslide in Hushe Valley in Gilgit-Baltistan region
  • Pakistan’s northern mountainous regions have experienced heavy flooding and landslides, killing several tourists

BERLIN: German biathlete and double Olympic champion Laura Dahlmeier has been at least seriously injured in a mountaineering accident in Pakistan, German media reports citing her management and a Pakistan government spokesperson said on Tuesday.

The accident occurred on Monday when Dahlmeier was hit by a landslide in Hushe Valley in the northern mountain range in Gilgit-Baltistan, said spokesperson Faizullah Faraq.

Germany’s ZDF broadcaster reported that no emergency response had so far reached her.

But Faraq said Dahlmeier, according to reports from the remote valley, was taken away by locals from the landslide site.

One of her companions, identified as Kraus Marina Eva, was still stuck at the site, he said.

Dahlmeier retired from the sport in 2019, aged 25, a year after becoming the first female biathlete to achieve a sprint and pursuit double at the same Olympics.

Her management did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment from Reuters.

ZDF said that a helicopter overflight on Tuesday had found no signs of life.

The rescue operation is under way with the cooperation of the Pakistan army, Faraq said, adding that bad weather meant a helicopter had been unable to reach the site.

The country’s northern mountainous regions have experienced heavy flooding and landslides, killing several local tourists during the current monsoon spell of rains.

Flooding and other rain-related accidents have killed 288 people in Pakistan since the monsoon season began in late June, says the country’s National Disaster Management Authority.


India’s Modi denies third party brokered peace with Pakistan

Updated 29 July 2025
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India’s Modi denies third party brokered peace with Pakistan

  • The fighting in May brought the rivals close to another war, but Trump announced a ceasefire between them before the two countries did
  • Soon, opposition parties in India started raising questions about third-party mediation between the foes, a claim New Delhi has always denied

NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday denied that any world leader pushed India to stop fighting Pakistan during their recent conflict, after repeated claims by US President Donald Trump that he had brokered peace.

The South Asian rivals fought an intense four-day conflict in May that left more than 70 people dead on both sides before Trump announced a ceasefire between the nuclear-armed neighbors.

“No world leader asked us to stop the operation,” Modi told parliament during a debate on “Operation Sindoor,” the military campaign launched against Pakistan in May.

Modi did not name Trump in his speech.

The Indian prime minister also claimed that it was Pakistan that pleaded with India to stop fighting after feeling the “heat of our attacks.”

The conflict was sparked by an April attack on tourists by gunmen in Indian-administered Kashmir that left 26 men dead, mostly Hindus.

India accused Pakistan of backing the attackers, a charge Islamabad denied.

Trump has claimed numerous times that he brokered peace between the rivals, including most recently on Monday.

“If I weren’t around, you’d have, right now, six major wars going on. India would be fighting with Pakistan,” Trump said during his visit to Scotland.

Modi’s assertion came after Rahul Gandhi from the opposition Congress party challenged the premier to say “inside the parliament that Donald Trump is lying.”

Earlier Tuesday, home minister Amit Shah told lawmakers that three Pakistani gunmen involved in the attack in Indian-administered Kashmir were killed during a military operation on Monday.

Shah told parliament that all three were Pakistani nationals and identified two of them as members of Lashkar-e-Taiba, a UN-designated terrorist group based in Pakistan.

Muslim-majority Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since their independence from British rule in 1947, and the neighbors — who both claim the region in full — have fought two wars and several conflicts over its control.

The fighting in May brought the rivals close to another war, but Trump announced a ceasefire between them before the two countries did.

Soon, opposition parties in India started raising questions about third-party mediation between the foes, a claim New Delhi has always denied.


CM Gandapur to lead Peshawar rally as Imran Khan’s party finalizes Aug. 5 protest plans

Updated 29 July 2025
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CM Gandapur to lead Peshawar rally as Imran Khan’s party finalizes Aug. 5 protest plans

  • The federal, Punjab governments have repeatedly warned in recent weeks they would not tolerate any form of violence in protests
  • Political analysts voice doubts about the ability of Khan’s party to stage effective protest, citing ‘internal fragmentation, leadership crisis’

ISLAMABAD: Jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s party said on Tuesday that it has finalized all preparations for a “strong and large” protest on Aug. 5, with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur set to lead the main rally in Peshawar.

Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party announced a 90-day “do or die” protest movement on July 13, saying it would peak on August 5, the second anniversary of Khan’s arrest.

The PTI has staged several protests in recent years to secure Khan’s release and demand an audit of the February 2024 general election, with a number of demonstrations resulting in clashes with law enforcers and in some cases paralyzing the capital Islamabad for days.

Pakistan’s election authorities deny the allegation of election irregularities, while the federal and Punjab governments have repeatedly warned in recent weeks that they would not tolerate any form of violence, accusing the PTI of trying to derail efforts for sustainable economic growth.

“We have completed our preparations and instructions have been issued to all district-level leaders to mobilize the public,” CM Gandapur told media on Tuesday, adding the party would move forward with its protest plan.

“I will lead a historic and the largest rally in Peshawar and other districts in the province will also arrange their rallies.”

Arab News reached out to the information and interior ministries in Islamabad and Punjab for comments on the government’s strategy to respond to the protest call but did not receive a response by the time of filing of this story.

Speaking to Arab News, Syed Zulifkar Bukhari, a close Khan aide, lamented arrests of supporters and disqualification of PTI lawmakers ahead of the protest, criticizing the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP).

“The ECP has been biased toward the PTI since the times when polls were conducted and well before too. Disqualification [of lawmakers] on the basis of false charges and politically motivated cases will cause more unrest in the country, in an already highly volatile situation.”

Pakistan’s election regulator this week disqualified PTI Senator Ijaz Chaudhry, Member of National Assembly Muhammad Ahmad Chattha, and Member of Punjab Provincial Assembly Ahmad Khan following their convictions by an anti-terrorism court in cases relating to May 9, 2023 protests, when hundreds of Khan supporters attacked government and military installations over the ex-premier’s brief arrest on graft charges.

Khan’s party termed the ECP’s decision “biased,” saying its lawmakers were not even issued notices before disqualification. In a statement, the ECP rejected the allegations of biasness, saying the three lawmakers had been convicted by the anti-terrorism court and their sentences were still in effect.

Bukhari expressed hopes that a large number of people would respond to their call for protest on Aug. 5.

“We are hopeful this time not only a large gathering from across the country will stage the protest to record their concern over illegal incarceration of former prime minister Khan and [his wife] Bushra Bibi, but also that the cornered quarters will heed to the solidarity at display,” he said.

But analysts were skeptical of an impressive show of political strength by Khan’s party, amid “internal fragmentation.”

“I still hope that sanity will prevail and PTI will call off the protest on August 5,” Ahmed Bilal Mehboob, president of the Islamabad-based think tank Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency (PILDAT), told Arab News.

“It may not be a very impressive show for a variety of reasons and the process of fragmentation in the party may be hastened if it is not a huge affair.”

Reports of rifts within the PTI emerged after CM Gandapur announced the 90-day protest drive against the government on July 13. The protest call appeared to contradict an earlier call for a nationwide protest posted on Khan’s official X account, set to culminate on August 5.

Speculation about differences within the party further grew after PTI Punjab’s chief organizer Aliya Hamza Malik voiced concerns on X about a lack of clarity around the protest campaign, questioning the origins of the 90-day plan and seeking details on the party’s strategy to secure Khan’s release.

Dr. Huma Baqai, another political commentator, said a possible government crackdown would deter mass mobilization and affect public participation in the protest.

“The PTI is too fragmented and facing a leadership crisis, yet it still evokes insecurities within the sitting government and perhaps even the establishment, leading to numerous arrests that are likely to have an impact,” she told Arab News.

“Interestingly, Jamaat-e-Islami has announced a rally for Palestine and Kashmir on the same day, a move seen as aimed at creating both confusion and diffusion.”


Pakistan PM offers condolences to China over deadly floods and landslides

Updated 29 July 2025
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Pakistan PM offers condolences to China over deadly floods and landslides

  • At least 30 people have been killed as torrential rains triggered devastation across northern China
  • Sharif says Pakistan has been facing similar challenges and stands in solidarity with Chinese people

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif expressed deep condolences to China on Tuesday following a wave of deadly floods and landslides that have killed dozens and displaced thousands across northern regions of the country, including Beijing and Hebei province.

The message came as torrential rains overwhelmed parts of northern China, dumping record volumes of water, triggering landslides and forcing mass evacuations.

At least 30 people have been killed, according to Chinese state media, with more fatalities feared as rescue operations continue.

Beijing and surrounding provinces have witnessed some of their worst flooding in years, with entire villages cut off and widespread infrastructure damage reported.

“We are deeply saddened by the tragic loss of lives and displacement caused by the recent torrential rains and landslides in China,” Sharif said in a statement posted on social media. “On behalf of the people of Pakistan as well as on my own behalf, I extend our heartfelt condolences to the bereaved families and all those affected.”

Sharif noted that Pakistan itself has suffered from extreme weather in recent years and understood the hardship faced by Chinese communities.

“We fully understand and empathize with the hardship that our Chinese brothers and sisters are enduring,” he added. “We are confident that the resilience and unity of the Chinese people, under the resolute leadership of President Xi Jinping, will see them through this difficult time.”

Sharif said the people of Pakistan stood in solidarity with the people of China, adding they were “bound together through thick and thin, in the spirit of iron clad brotherhood.”

China and Pakistan share a longstanding strategic partnership, with close cooperation in defense, infrastructure, and economic development.

Beijing has invested tens of billions of dollars in Pakistan through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a flagship project under the Belt and Road Initiative to enhance regional connectivity.