Digital, forensic evidence suggests actress Humaira Asghar Ali died in Oct. 2024 — officials 

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Updated 09 July 2025
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Digital, forensic evidence suggests actress Humaira Asghar Ali died in Oct. 2024 — officials 

  • Ali’s decomposed body was found at a flat in Karachi on Tuesday when a court bailiff arrived to vacate the rented property 
  • Police cite phone data, social media inactivity to estimate death occurred nine months ago, family declines to claim body

KARACHI: Pakistani actress and model Humaira Asghar Ali is believed to have died at least nine months ago in October 2024 based on digital and forensic evidence, investigators told Arab News on Thursday, after her decomposed body was discovered this week in her Karachi apartment.

Ali’s remains were found at a flat in the city’s Ittehad Commercial area when a court bailiff arrived to vacate the rented property on Tuesday, following a complaint by the landlord. Police said the bailiff broke open the door and found the deceased inside.

Initially, Karachi Police Surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed, who conducted the post-mortem, said the body’s “very advanced stage of decomposition” suggested death had occurred around a month prior.

However, police investigations into Ali’s phone records, her last social media activity and interviews with neighbors found no indication that she had been alive after October 2024, Arab News has found. Her last Facebook post was on September 11, 2024 and last Instagram post on September 30, 2024. Neighbors interviewed by police and reporters said they had not seen her since Sept-Oct last year. 

Deputy Inspector General of Police Syed Asad Raza confirmed that Ali’s phone was last active in October 2024, with the final recorded call placed that month.

“As per Call Detail Record (CDR) the last call was made in October 2024,” Raza told Arab News, without offering further details.

Two officials with direct knowledge of the case, who declined to be named, said the estimated time of death was around October 2024.

“Humaira’s body is likely nine months old,” the first official said on condition of anonymity. “She probably died between paying her last utility bills and when her electricity was disconnected in October 2024, probably due to non-payment of the bill.”

A second official who also requested anonymity said expired food items and rusted containers in the kitchen supported that timeline.

“The jars had rusted, and food had expired six months ago,” the official said. 

There was only one other apartment on the same floor, which was vacant at the time, possibly delaying detection, investigators said. 

“The occupants of that apartment told us they returned in February, and by then the smell had faded. After ten to fifteen days, the odour starts to decrease. The balcony door had also been left open,” the second official added.

Water pipes in the home were dry and rusted and no alternative power source was found. 

“There were no candles either,” the official said.

Police surgeon Syed, who conducted the autopsy on Tuesday, returned to the apartment on Wednesday with senior officers.

“We have collected multiple surface samples from the scene, which have been sent to the laboratory,” she said, declining to provide further comment.

Police said Ali’s family had declined to claim the body. It is unclear whether she was estranged from her relatives or what the exact reason was that they had refused to receive her remains. 

Ali rose to fame after winning Veet Miss Super Model in 2014 and appearing in reality show Tamasha Ghar in 2022.

She has featured in television dramas such as Just Married, Ehsaan Faramosh, Guru, and Chal Dil Mere. In cinema, she appeared in the 2015 action-thriller Jalaibee and later in Love Vaccine in 2021.


Pakistan approves industrial estate on steel mills land, $10 million upgrade for state TV English channel

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Pakistan approves industrial estate on steel mills land, $10 million upgrade for state TV English channel

  • Pakistan Steel Mills, once country’s biggest industrial complex, is dormant since 2015, governments have long debated how to repurpose its land
  • ECC also approved funds for climate diplomacy at COP-30 in Brazil, grant to upgrade PTV’s English news channel to enhance global outreach

KARACHI: Pakistan’s top economic decision-making body has approved plans to build an industrial estate on the land of the country’s largest state-owned steel producer, part of a package of measures aimed at boosting exports, investment and climate diplomacy, the finance division said this week. 

Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM), located in Karachi, was once the country’s biggest industrial complex but has been largely dormant since 2015 due to financial losses and mismanagement. Successive governments have sought to privatize or repurpose its land and assets.

The Economic Coordination Committee (ECC), which oversees key economic policy, said turning the site into an industrial estate would generate jobs and attract investment.

“The ECC approved the development of an Industrial Estate on the land of Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM) in Karachi, aimed at boosting industrial activity, generating employment opportunities, and attracting investment,” the Finance Division said in a statement after a meeting chaired by Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb on Wednesday evening. 

The ECC also approved measures to support Pakistan’s leather industry, including scrapping the requirement for health quarantine certificates on imports and exports to “enhance its competitiveness in international markets.”

Another major decision was the allocation of a technical supplementary grant of 2.8 billion rupees ($10 million) for the state-run Pakistan Television Corporation to upgrade its English-language news channel. The committee said the goal was to “improve broadcast quality and expand outreach to global audiences,” while urging the channel to develop a business plan to reduce reliance on federal subsidies.

In addition, a separate grant was approved for the Ministry of Climate Change to strengthen its participation at the upcoming COP-30 climate summit in Brazil, reflecting Pakistan’s push to maintain visibility in global climate talks after championing the “Loss and Damage” agenda in 2022.

The Finance Division said the ECC chair concluded the meeting by stressing “the importance of timely and effective implementation of these decisions to ensure their intended economic and social benefits.”


PM announces creation of missile command in Pakistan army aimed at boosting combat power

Updated 3 min 23 sec ago
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PM announces creation of missile command in Pakistan army aimed at boosting combat power

  • Sharif announced establishment of Army Rocket Force at pre-Independence Day ceremony on Wednesday 
  • Security official said force will operate under its own command, dedicated to handling, deploying missiles in conventional war

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will create a new force in the military to supervise missile combat capabilities in a conventional conflict, apparently a move to match the neighboring arch-rival India.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced the creation of the Army Rocket Force late Wednesday at a ceremony held in Islamabad to commemorate the worst conflict in decades with India in May.

The ceremony was held a day ahead of Pakistan’s 78th Independence Day.

“It will be equipped with modern technology,” Sharif said in a statement from his office, adding that the force will prove to be a milestone in strengthening the combat capability of Pakistan’s army.

He did not give any further details.

A senior security official, however, said that the force will have its own command in the military which will be dedicated to handling and deployment of missiles in any event of a conventional war.

“It is obvious that it is meant for India,” he said.

The two nuclear-armed nations keep upgrading their military capabilities in the wake of a longstanding rivalry since their independence from British rule in 1947.

The latest tension between the two countries soared in April over the killing of 26 civilians in Indian-administered Kashmir, an attack New Delhi blamed on Islamabad. Pakistan denied involvement.

A conflict then erupted in May, the most serious fighting between the two countries in decades, which saw both sides using missiles, drones and fighter jets before it ended with a ceasefire announcement by US President Donald Trump.

Islamabad acknowledges the US role, but India denies it, saying it was agreed directly between the two militaries.


Pakistan court declares senior police officer fugitive in ‘staged killing’ of blasphemy suspect

Updated 15 min 13 sec ago
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Pakistan court declares senior police officer fugitive in ‘staged killing’ of blasphemy suspect

  • Dr. Shahnawaz Kunbhar was arrested in Karachi in Sept. 2024, later killed in what a government inquiry found to be a staged police encounter
  • Pakistan’s blasphemy laws carry a mandatory death penalty, have often fueled mob violence, prosecutions of police in such cases are rare

KARACHI: A Pakistani court has declared a senior police officer and three others fugitives in the killing of a doctor accused of blasphemy, according to a court order shared with the victim’s lawyer this week, the latest development in a case seen as a rare instance of police facing prosecution over such allegations.

Dr. Shahnawaz Kunbhar, accused of posting blasphemous content online, was arrested in Karachi in September 2024 and killed days later in Mirpurkhas. Police initially said the killing was unintentional, claiming he was shot during an exchange of fire when officers tried to stop two men on a motorcycle. Authorities later admitted they only realized afterwards that the dead man was Kunbhar, who had been facing a blasphemy case. The incident sparked mass protests in the southern Sindh province and widespread outrage on social media.

A provincial government inquiry later concluded that Kunbhar had in fact been killed in a staged encounter. Ten officers, including Deputy Inspector General (DIG) Javed Soonharo Jiskan, were suspended, and 34 suspects were charged — a rare move in Pakistan where people accused of blasphemy are often targeted by mobs and police seldom face accountability.

During hearings, FIA officials also recorded statements from five members of the medical board that exhumed Kunbhar’s body. One of them, Professor Dr. Waheed, confirmed evidence of torture, including five broken ribs.

An Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) in Mirpurkhas, Sindh province, had in December ordered the arrest of six police officers over what the government inquiry described as a fake encounter. Those named included DIG Javed Soonharo Jiskani, Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Muhammad Asad Ali Chaudhry, and four others: Lakhmir Khan, Muhammad Siddique, Abdul Sattar, and Allah Jurio.

“The said four accused viz. Javed Soonharo Jiskani, Lakhmir Khan, Muhammad Siddique and Abdul Sattar are hereby declared proclaimed offenders,” Judge Abdul Ghani Soomro wrote in a July 29 order, which was shared with the victim’s counsel on Wednesday.

“The court declared these officers proclaimed offenders at the last hearing, and I hope that on the coming hearing accused Ex-SSP Mirpurkhas Muhammad Asad Ali Chaudhry will also be declared a proclaimed offender,” Aijaz Halepoto, the victim’s advocate, told Arab News.

The judge said no serious efforts had been made to arrest Chaudhry, issuing fresh non-bailable warrants for his detention and directing the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) to enforce them. He noted that while FIA officials had tried to track the four already declared offenders, “there is no prospect of their arrest in near future” as they were actively concealing themselves.

Blasphemy is a highly sensitive issue in Pakistan, where insulting the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) carries a mandatory death sentence. Although no one has yet been executed by the state for blasphemy, accusations — often based on little or no evidence — have triggered violent mob attacks and lynchings.

While vigilante killings are common, extra-judicial executions by police are far less frequent. Legal action against officers accused of such killings is even rarer, making the Kunbhar case highly unusual.

Human rights groups have repeatedly called on Pakistan to repeal or reform its blasphemy laws, saying they are often misused to settle personal scores and fuel discrimination and violence. They have also urged authorities to improve police handling of blasphemy allegations to prevent further abuses.


Veteran Pakistani journalist, now 85, recalls birth of country, evolution of national media

Updated 19 min 52 sec ago
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Veteran Pakistani journalist, now 85, recalls birth of country, evolution of national media

  • Muhammad Arshad started his career in 1960s, has worked for several newspapers and state-owned PTV
  • Arshad says profession has shifted from serving nation to prioritizing personal gain but hopes for better future 

ISLAMABAD: In the early hours of Aug. 14, 1947, hundreds gathered on the lawn of the Shakargarh tehsil headquarters, waiting for history to be made. 

As a German-made Grundig radio crackled to life with the announcement of Pakistan’s independence, headmasters, scholars, businesspeople and children erupted in joy. Among them was seven-year-old Muhammad Arshad.

Now 85, Arshad has spent more than five decades in journalism, witnessing both Pakistan’s turbulent history and the transformation of its news media.

The British partition of the subcontinent created two states on the basis of religion, with Muslim-majority areas allocated to Pakistan and Hindu-majority to India. The process triggered the largest mass migration in human history, with an estimated one million people killed in communal violence.

Arshad’s hometown of Shakargarh, then part of Gurdaspur district in present-day Indian Punjab, was allocated to Pakistan, while Gurdaspur itself went to India. The tehsil became a hub for Muslim migrants fleeing violence, many of them wounded and destitute.

“All the people who arrived were injured, cut up or wounded,” Arshad recalled. “And they came into Shakargarh city, where there was only one government dispensary.”

Arshad moved to Lahore in the 1950s for higher education, earning a Master’s degree in Journalism from Punjab University in 1961 as part of its first graduating class in the subject. He began his career that year as a sub-editor at Daily Kohistan, later working for several newspapers before joining state broadcaster Pakistan Television (PTV) in 1983, where he served until 2000.

After retirement, he continued contributing to newspapers and television until 2010, and taught journalism at Pakistani universities until 2023.

His career has given Arshad a unique vantage point to comment on Pakistan’s media landscape, whose ethos he says has changed fundamentally.

“In earlier times, journalism meant serving the nation’s existence, not one’s own, like I am no one,” he said. “And now, there is no preference to the nation, and I am on the forefront.”

Indeed, Pakistan’s news media, particularly its private television channels and digital outlets, regularly face criticism for political bias, sensationalism and spreading misinformation. 

Arshad contrasted current practices with his early years in the profession.

“During my career, news outlets gathered facts from the field like a sacred trust and reported them honestly,” he said. “Now everyone wants to put himself and personal gains at the forefront and the public is behind somewhere.”

He also lamented what he sees as a weakening command of the Urdu language among journalists, anchors and newscasters, urging them to refine their delivery and avoid mixing words.

“If we revive that spirit of truth and integrity, the profession can still guide Pakistan to a better future,” Arshad said.

Indeed, at the end of the day, the veteran media man still remains hopeful — for the future of the media and Pakistan. 

“There is no need for despair because it will be fine. How will it be fine? There is no argument for this except one,” he said.

“When Pakistan came into being, it did not even have a needle. Now, it is an atomic power.”


Pakistan leaders mark Independence Day with calls for unity, hail ‘victory’ in May conflict with India 

Updated 40 min 29 sec ago
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Pakistan leaders mark Independence Day with calls for unity, hail ‘victory’ in May conflict with India 

  • Civilian and military leaders reaffirm solidarity with Kashmiris, vow to defend Pakistan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity
  • May conflict with India has become a rallying point for Pakistani leaders to emphasize unity, resilience, renewed national confidence

KARACHI: Pakistan’s civilian and military leaders marked the country’s 78th Independence Day on Thursday by hailing what they described as a decisive victory against India in a brief military conflict earlier this year, using the anniversary to call for unity at home and reiterate support for disputed Kashmir.

The South Asian nation, which has fought three major wars with India since partition in 1947, said it had downed six Indian jets in fighting through missiles, drones and artillery that raged between May 6 and 10 before ending through US mediation. Officials have since framed the confrontation — which Islamabad has dubbed Marka-e-Haq, or “Battle of Truth” — as a moment of national resurgence.

Pakistan, carved out of British India in 1947, has seen repeated bouts of political turmoil, economic instability and tense relations with its neighbor in the decades since. This year’s Independence Day messages underscored how the May conflict has become a rallying point for its leaders to emphasize unity, resilience and renewed national confidence.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif attends flag hoisting ceremony at Pakistan Monument, Islamabad on August 14, 2025. (GoP)

“Pakistan’s great victory in Marka-e-Haq during the war imposed by India on 6-10th May 2025 has not only increased the significance of freedom, but has also enliven a new ambition and enthusiasm in the hearts of Pakistanis, which has amplified the joy and celebrations of the Independence Day,” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in a statement. 

“The military capability, valour and faith of our brave soldiers and air warriors forced the enemy to kneel down … With same passion, we stand vigilant to defend and safeguard our national interests including water resources.”

In a separate message, President Asif Ali Zardari also linked the country’s birth anniversary to the May conflict. 

“Our success in Marka-e-Haq … is a landmark moment in our history,” he said, calling it “a demonstration of unshakable national will, professional excellence, and united purpose.” 

Zardari added that “the world witnessed a nation that is peace-loving, but fully capable of defending its sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

The president used his address to urge Pakistanis to channel “the same discipline, courage, and clarity” into economic revival and social reform, saying recent military success should inspire efforts to eradicate poverty and strengthen institutions.

Both leaders reiterated Pakistan’s long-standing stance on Kashmir, which is disputed between India and Pakistan since 1947.

“India also needs to demonstrate the same will for the resolution of all disputes, including the Jammu and Kashmir dispute,” Sharif said, while Zardari pledged diplomatic, moral, and political support to Kashmiris “until their right to self-determination is realized.”

In a joint message, the chiefs of Pakistan’s army, navy and air force stressed that the “unbreakable bond between the Armed Forces and the people is the cornerstone of our collective strength,” pledging to safeguard Pakistan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and uphold the constitution.