Category: Uncategorized

  • Jaranwala and Sargodha incidents were a foreign conspiracy: IG Punajb

    Jaranwala and Sargodha incidents were a foreign conspiracy: IG Punajb

    Inspector General Police, Punjab Dr. Usman Anwar has claimed that no incident like Jaranwala and Sargodha will happen in Punjab again, asserting that the police have “broken the network” of a foreign intelligence agency and the two incidents were “a conspiracy against Pakistan”.

    Punjab Police has uploaded a 4-minute long video on X (formerly Twitter) in which Dr. Usman Anwar explains in detail what led to the two gruesome incidents. He is apparently referring to human rights organisations.

    He pointed out that Christian women were treated badly in the neighbouring country and as a result, a resolution was presented in the European Union condemning the atrocities on Muslims and Christians. Concerns were also raised in North America.

    This was followed by a series of strange incidents like the Jaranwala tragedy and then the desecration of the Holy Quran and conspiracy to harm the minority communities by inciting people started taking place — all to divert the world’s attention.

    “We need to understand this conspiracy and thwart it. More than 2500 police personnel in plain clothes have been deployed to suppress the evil elements, and such elements will be dealt with iron hands.”

    He also added: “We will not let pakistan become a scapegoat for the great injustice that was done across the border”
    IG Punjab has not named any country or intelligence agency as of yet but he assures he will “not let attention be diverted from the rapes and deaths and human rights violations” in Pakistan.

  • Massive ancient forest discovered 630 feet down sinkhole in China

    A recent scientific expedition ushered in the discovery of an ancient hidden forest located within a sinkhole in China.

    The secret forest is located more than 600 feet inside a sinkhole that is situated within karst bedrock near a village in Leye County, Guangxi Zhuang.

    The sinkhole is apparently one of at least 30 in the country. The researcher found three different cave entrances on May 6.

    The sinkhole is 492ft (150m) wide and has a volume of more than five million cubic metres. While the entire network of caverns is approximately 1,004ft (306m).

    Zhang Yuanhai, a senior engineer with the Institute of Karst Geology of China Geological Survey, spoke with Xinhua news agency. According to him, the sinkhole contains an incredibly well-preserved and primitive forest with trees stretching as high 130ft (40m) tall.

    https://twitter.com/dw_environment/status/1526934382157520896?s=20

    Chen Lixin, leader of the Guangxi 702 expedition, told Live Science that he “wouldn’t be surprised to know that there are species found in these caves that have never been reported or described by science until now”.

  • Blasphemy: what happened to the man who falsely accused 14-year-old Rimsha?

    In August 2012, Rimsha Masih was arrested on blasphemy charges. At the time, Masih was only 14 years old. She had allegedly desecrated the pages of Holy Quran by burning them.

    But what really went down?

    A local Muslim boy, Hammad, had asked Rimsha Masih to hand over the trash bag she was carrying. He inspected it and took the bag to the cleric of the local mosque named Hafiz Mohammed Khalid Chishti. As evidence against the girl, Chishti showed a few burned pages of the Holy Scripture to the police. As this incident came to light, there was a collective outrage from the local Muslims. And as narrated by Mohammad Hanif in an article for The Guardian, 300 local Christian families were forced to escape their residence and seek refuge in a forest in Islamabad.

    Chishti told AFP News that he thought Rimsha had ‘“deliberately” burnt the pages as part of a Christian “conspiracy” to insult Muslims and that action against such activities should have been taken “sooner”.

    Resultantly, minor Rimshah Masih was arrested. She spent more than three weeks on remand in an adult jail. During her trial, her age was evaluated through medical reports that concluded it to be 14 but with a “mental age younger than that”. This supported the claims of Masih being a child with Down’s Syndrome that the accuser’s lawyer rejected stating that the doctors are “favouring the victim and the state is also supporting her”.

    Rimsha was released on bail the following month of September after the police clarified in court that she was not guilty of the accusations made against her and that it was, in fact, the cleric himself who allegedly conspired against the young girl.

    But did Rimsha Masih get justice in the face of a false blasphemy case?

    Following Rimsha Masih’s acquittal, Hafiz Mohammed Khalid Chishti was arrested. Several witnesses against him were taken into record. It was claimed that Chishti had included the Holy Scriptures in the trash bag himself in order to portray Rimsha as the desecrator. The witnesses also claimed that Chishti believed that this was the only way to drive out Christians from their community.

    This meant that Chishti himself was now guilty of desecrating the Holy Scripture. The-then Investigation Officer (IO) Munir Jafferi, while talking to The Express Tribune, said that Chishti could be sentenced to life imprisonment if convicted of desecrating the Holy Book.

    He was sent on 14-day judicial remand under Section 295-B of the Pakistan Penal Code.

    By 2013, Rimsha Masih and her family escaped to Canada because even in her innocence, she was not safe in Pakistan. They were given permanent Canadian residency on “humanitarian and compassionate grounds”.

    All the while, that same year, all witnesses against Chishti withdrew their claims, and thus, the court dismissed all charges against him.

    History of Blasphemy Laws in Pakistan

    In 1860, the British colonisers introduced the Indian Penal Code. It consisted of a chapter that criminalised offences relating to religion in order to counter Muslim-Hindu-Sikh conflict in the Indian Subcontinent:
    Section 295, Injuring or defiling place of worship, with intent to insult the religion of any class
    Section 296, Disturbing religious assembly
    Section 297, Trespassing on burial places, etc.–Whoever, with the intention of wounding the feelings of any person (Section 297)
    Section 298, Uttering words, etc., with deliberate intent to wound religious feelings

    But in 1927, the laws buoyed out as vague clauses were added in the Penal Code, further deregulating the conflicts. As per 295 A, “Deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage religious feelings of any class by insulting its religion or religious beliefs” was also a punishable offence.

    It is to note that the maximum punishment under these laws was from one year to a maximum of 10 years in jail, with or without a fine.

    In some instances, people took the law into their own hands. A case often recounted from the pre-partitioned India is of an objectionable book on Islam. It was written by a man named Pandat Chamupatt but anonymously published. The publisher was a journalist, Mahashe Rajpal, who owned a publishing house called ‘Rajpal & Sons’.

    The book was deemed as blasphemous by Muslims. Lawsuit against the publisher was filed under section 153 A: “Promoting enmity between different groups on ground of religion, race, place of birth, residence, language, etc.” Punjab High Court in Lahore, however, acquitted the publisher of the charges on “technical grounds” since the law did not highlight ‘adverse discussions of the life and character of a deceased religious leader’.

    The British Raj then made amendments to the law and included section 295-A to punish “deliberate acts intended to outrage religious feelings of any community… by words, either spoken or written”.

    The acquittal, nonetheless, led to protests, criticism, and threats; and after several failed attempts, the editor of the publishing house was assassinated in 1929.

    The next reported case was in Karachi in 1934. Nathu Ram, an active member of Arya Samaj, too, had allegedly written an objectionable book on the history of Islam.

    This, once again, prompted an angry reaction by the Muslims. After a trial, he was imprisoned for a year and fined for his offence. Ram had filed an appeal in the court but during one of his hearings in March 1936, he was attacked and killed.

    His killer was a man named Abdul Qayum from Hazara from the North West Frontier Province (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa). Muslims back then gave him the status of Ghazi and a shrine was built after his death.

    Even then, however, killings over blasphemy were comparatively a rarity.

    Post-1947, with Muslims and Hindus officially divided, the anti-blasphemy laws remained intact in Pakistan.

    These laws were cemented under the dictatorship of General Zia-ul-Haq.

    General Zia made changes to the Penal Code and added five new clauses between 1980 to 1986, including:
    295 B, which criminalises the desecration of the Quran.
    295 C, which criminalises with life imprisonment or the death penalty any direct or indirect desecration of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
    298 A, which criminalises direct or indirect desecration of wives and relatives of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).

    At first, section 295-C only contained life imprisonment as the punishment for blasphemy but it was replaced with death penalty as the parliamentarians pushed it on the basis of ijma (consensus of Islamic scholars). The Federal Shariat Court (FSC), too, defended the death penalty for blasphemy even though four out of seven ulemas that were consulted by the FSC opposed the ruling. The opponents of the death penalty included Jamaat-e-Islami’s founder, Maulana Maududi; head of the Barelvi sect, Ahmad Raza Khan; and the head of the Deobandi sect, Mahmood Deobandi.

    They all agreed that blasphemy was a pardonable offence and that “death penalty cannot be given for single offences”.

    In 2010, Dawn published an article tracing the qualitative results of the anti-blasphemy laws. While less than 10 cases of blasphemy were reported between 1927 and 1986; post-1986, as many as 4,000 cases were recorded. Then, between 1988 and 2005, 647 people were charged out of which 50 percent were non-Muslim. More than 20 people have been murdered for alleged blasphemy.

    49 per cent of 361 cases of blasphemy offences registered between 1986 and 2007 were against non-Muslims even though non-Muslims make less than four per cent of the total population.

    The situation began to worsen in 2011 with the murder of former governor of Punjab, Salmaan Taseer, who was vocal against the anti-blasphemy laws and supported Asia Bibi who was then given death penalty for committing blasphemy (but acquitted in 2019). Taseer’s killer, Mumtaz Qadri, was arrested and was later hanged but he became a hero to many who hailed him for his deed. More than 100,000 people attended his funeral and his shrine is still visited by hundreds.

    Lawyer Asad Jamal recalls the day after Salmaan Taseer’s death. He was on Mall Road, Lahore, where he spoke with sepoys regarding Taseer’s murder. “No one wanted to condemn the act”, he still remembers. “It was very telling of the direction the country was heading towards.”

    Since 2011, the number in cases, accusations, and killings have increased. In a report by Centre for Research and Security Studies (CRSS), as of 2021, 43 people have been extrajudicially killed since 2011 and 1,185 accused.

    When it comes to the role of lawyers and judges in blasphemy cases, Jamal believes that it is simply reflective of the socio-political situation of Pakistan. The state of affairs have worsened over the past 20 years. Apart from frail economy and political rifts, there is a major element of fundamentalism that comes in the shape of parties like TLP and their massive support.

    “Such an environment doesn’t encourage a lot of lawyers to take up blasphemy cases.”

    He also adds that very few lawyers have “worthwhile legal skills” to take up blasphemy cases. Many simply do not want to deal with these issues. People like Asma Jahangir and Abid Hasan Minto were not mainstream but exceptions. Apart from being courageous, they were competent. “But now, the times have changed,” he adds.

    Peter Jacob, a human rights activist and the director of Centre for Social Justice (CSJ), says that while some politicians condemn violence against the minorities like the recent Jaranwala case, it, nonetheless, always has a cost one has to bear due to the sensitivity of the matter.

    While talking about the youth belonging to religious minorities, Jacob has noticed a segment within Christians and Hindus who are actively participating in political discussions on- and offline. The examples are the recent protests held in various cities across Pakistan, including Karachi, Lahore, Swat, Kurram district, and Rawalpindi against the Jaranwala incident.

    “I am quite impressed by their sense of belonging and their affiliation with the case of a better Pakistan, their respect for human rights and democracy. Civil liberty will play a role of a natural healer — healing of the society and articulation of the way forward out of these troubled times,” he added.

    Jacob, however, believes that there has to be resolve at the national level by powerful quarters to understand the height of radicalisation that has taken place in order to control the lethality of the problem. “While there is political fragmentation, a free and fair atmosphere must be created where political forces can play their role and come up with people-centric solutions that will entail the process of self-healing and accountability.”

  • Tuesday 11AM to decide Khan’s fate as court to announce the Toshakhana appeal verdict

    The Islamabad High Court (IHC) will resume hearing today of former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s petition seeking suspension of sentence by the trial court in the Toshakhana case.

    A two-member bench, comprising Chief Justice Aamer Farooq and Justice Tariq Mehmood Jahangiri, is hearing the case, and in today’s hearing, the Election Commission of Pakistan’s (ECP) lawyer Amjad Parvez will give his arguments, as he was not present in the last hearing on Friday because of health reasons.

    On the request of his assistant lawyer, the court postponed the hearing until today (Monday). Due to the lawyer’s unavailability, the court also instructed the electoral authorities to make other arrangements.

    Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) attorney, Latif Khosa, finished his arguments in the last hearing.

    The IHC will announce the verdict tomorrow (Tuesday) at 11am.

    Earlier, Judge Humayun Dilawar sentenced Imran Khan to three years imprisonment and fined him one lakh rupees. According to the judgement, “Charges of misdeclaration of assets have been proven against the PTI chairman.”

  • Ban on abayas in state-run schools in France

    The French education minister has imposed a ban on students, prohibiting them from wearing abayas in state-run schools. The ban will be imposed from the next academic year starting September 4.

    France has always prohibited religious manifestations in state schools and government spaces as they “violate secular laws”.

    Ban on abayas has been implemented after months of debate over the attire worn in schools.

    Education Minister Gabriel Attal, while talking to France’s TF1 TV, said: “When you walk into a classroom, you shouldn’t be able to identify the pupils’ religion just by looking at them,

    “I have decided that the abaya could no longer be worn in schools.”

    With an increasing number of students wearing abayas, the political divide has widened as the right-wing parties are pressing for a ban while the left-wing is advocating for the rights of Muslim women and girls.

    “Secularism means the freedom to emancipate oneself through school,” added Attal. He believes that abaya is “a religious gesture, aimed at testing the resistance of the republic toward the secular sanctuary that school must constitute.”

    France implemented a strict ban on religious signs in schools back in the 19th Century which included Christian symbols like large crosses. The purpose was to eliminate any Catholic influence on public education. Now that people from other religions have a significant presence in French society, the laws have been updated and are targeted at the Muslim headscarf and Jewish kippa.

    France first imposed a ban on headscarf in state-run schools in 2004 while full face veils were banned in public in 2010.

  • Shah Rukh Khan endorses a gaming app and protests erupt outside his home, security increased

    Shah Rukh Khan endorses a gaming app and protests erupt outside his home, security increased

    Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan’s recent endorsements were met with severe backlash from the public, including an NGO which felt the actor was encouraging younger minds to play online games. The actor recently endorsed a gaming app A23, an online platform, for which a commercial was released in which the ‘Pathaan’ actor said “Chalo saath khelein’.

    Protests followed and were led by the NGO Untouch Youth Foundation, which called for celebrities to be held accountable for promoting online gaming apps which could ‘corrupt their minds of the youth of India’. Demonstrations were held outside Mannat house, SRK’s residence, and police officials were deployed in case of security threats.

    In an official statement, the organisation said they were calling for a protest against gaming apps like Zuppee, Jungly Rummy, and called out actors who endorsed these products.

    “Famous actors and actresses work in these advertisements and they are working towards misguiding society. The protest will be held outside Shah Rukh Khan’s Mannat bungalow on behalf of Untouch India Foundation.”

    The president of Untouch India Foundation, Krishchandra Adal, said:

    “The new generation is involved in playing Junglee rummy. If someone is playing Junglee rummy or gambling outside, the police arrest them, but big Bollywood stars promoting online games are misleading the young generation. The Bollywood stars also know it is wrong, but they are getting money so they are promoting them. We make these stars famous by watching their movies and spending our money on them. We demand these advertisements to stop. These apps are illegal, we can not find them on Google, but these apps are uploaded on private websites.”

  • New dengue cases reported across Punjab

    New dengue cases reported across Punjab

    New cases of dengue are being reported across Punjab. In Lahore alone, 18 confirmed cases have been reported in the past 24 hours while 83 confirmed cases were reported in less than a week.

    According to Dunya News, more than 30,000 dengue hotspots were found in the city by the government officials. Doctors are advising people to strictly follow standard operating procedures (SOPs).

    Similarly, dengue cases in Rawalpindi crossed 100 last week with at least 13 more patients diagnosed in the last 24 hours while 63 FIRs registered, 18 tickets issued, and 28 premises were sealed.

    District Coordinator Epidemics Prevention and Control Dr Sajjad Mehmood said the Rawalpindi administration registered as many as 1,802 FIRs on violations of anti-dengue SOPs from January 1 to date in various areas of the district.

    The Express Tribune has reported that the district administration, in collaboration with allied departments, had sealed 438 premises, issued tickets to 646 and a fine of Rs31,33,000 was imposed on violations of dengue SOPs in 2023.

    On August 23, Business Recorder reported that up till now, since January 1, 2023, a total of 678 confirmed dengue cases had been recorded in all the 36 districts of Punjab but fortunately there have been no deaths.

    Punjab Minister for Primary and Secondary Healthcare Dr Jamal Nasir has stated that on directions of caretaker Chief Minister Punjab Mohsin Naqvi, special dengue centres have been established in district and tehsil headquarters hospitals, which will provide free treatment to dengue patients.

    Dr Nasir has also claimed that larva monitoring has been increased throughout Punjab and strict legal action will be taken against the violators.

  • PM Kakar congratulates Arshad Nadeem on his win

    PM Kakar congratulates Arshad Nadeem on his win

    Star javelin thrower Arshad Nadeem made history on Sunday when he became the first Pakistani to win the first-ever silver medal for his country at the World Athletics Championship in Budapest, Hungary with his best 87.82-meter throw.

    India’s Neeraj Chopra was able to secure the gold medal with his best throw of 88.17 meters.

    Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar ul Haq Kakar took to X (former Twitter) and congratulated Arshad Nadeem as he became the first Pakistani to win a medal at the World Athletics Championship.

    It was the Nadeem’s third throw that was the biggest breakthrough as it reached as far as 87.82 meters — his season’s best.

    Arshad Nadeem celebrated his win by stating, “What a day! Tiring yet rewarding. Like to thank Allah for this giving me the ability to go this far. This was the first time in the history of Pakistan that any Pakistani athlete won a medal at the World athletics championships.”

    Pakistani cricketer and former team captain Mohammad Hafeez said, “Proud of u.”

    Hassan Cheema, selection committee secretary and manager analytics and team strategy for the national cricket team men’s side, said: “Grew up watching Diamond Leagues & World Championships on Super Sports without ever expecting to see a Pakistani face in it ever. Today we’ve got a medal!! ”

    Pakistanis all around the world are celebrating this win and are looking forward to many more.

  • India appoints first-ever female chargé d’affaires in Pakistan

    India appoints first-ever female chargé d’affaires in Pakistan

    Geetika Srivastava will be the first-ever female chargé d’affaires (an ambassador’s deputy) appointed by the Indian High Commission in Islamabad, reports The News.

    She was appointed soon after the designation of the United Kingdom’s first female high commissioner to Pakistan.

    Following the friction in the bilateral relations between Pakistan and India in 2019, no full-time high commissioner has been posted in Islamabad or New Delhi, and instead, junior diplomats are posted as chargé d’affaires.

    The last Indian High Commissioner in Islamabad, Ajay Bisaria, was removed in 2019 after Pakistan decided to downgrade diplomatic ties over India’s revocation of the special status of Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).

    Some of the qualified Indian high commissioners serving in Islamabad departed and were promoted as foreign secretaries in India.

    Who is Geetika Srivastava?

    Geetika Srivastava is from the 2005 batch of the Indian Foreign Service (IFS).

    She speaks Chinese (Mandarin) fluently and has previously been appointed in China for an assignment. Originally from Uttar Pradesh, she has also served as Regional Passport Officer in Kolkata and Director in the IOR Division of the Ministry of External Affairs.

    She is currently a Joint Secretary in charge of the Indo-Pacific Division in the Ministry of External Affairs, New Delhi. The Indo-Pacific Division of the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) looks after India’s multilateral diplomacy with ASEAN, IORA, FIPIC, and other entities in the Indo-Pacific region.

  • 4 suspects rearrested in Fatima murder case

    4 suspects rearrested in Fatima murder case

    Four suspects in the 10-year-old Fatima case have been rearrested after a short release on Sunday.

    The suspects included SHO Ameer Chang; two doctors Dr. Fateh Memon and Dr. Ali Hasan Wasan and hospital worker Imtiaz Meerasi.

    According to Investigation Officer, Qazi Bachal, they were released on evidence of their innocence. However, they are still under investigation.

    The four were accused of concealing facts, concealing crime and neglect of duties.

    Samaa news reports that no suspect was produced in court and that they were free without any investigation allegedly due to political pressure.

    Additionally, on Saturday, Judicial Magistrate Khairpur extended the physical remand of Pir Asad Shah, the main suspect in the Fatima murder case, by three days.

    Previously

    Pir Asad Shah, the main suspect in the Fatima murder case at Ranipur Haveli in Khairpur, was being facilitated by a local SHO of police to remain in contact with his mureeds [followers], geo.tv has reported.

    Earlier, DIG Sukkur Javed Jaskani had said in a conversation with Geo News that the police will not accommodate any pressure in the case.

    The seven days long bail period of Hina Shah, another suspect in the case, has also ended.

    Pir Asad Shah is the main suspect in the killing of 10-year-old Fatima who was found dead at the Haveli. The child, who was working as a domestic servant at the Haveli, was hastily buried. However, subsequent exhumation and autopsy revealed that Fatima had multiple injuries over her body, and had been raped vaginally and anally.

    More cases linked to Ranipur Haveli

    Recently, National Commission for Human Rights tweeted that four children, along with their mothers, have been rescued from Ranipur Haveli in Khairpur, where they had been working.

    However, more troubling details emerged from the Haveli where 10-year-old Fatima was previously found dead.

    A 20-year-old girl named Sana has reportedly gone missing from the Haveli.

    She was a resident of Meena village in Qamber. According to Geo, Sana’s father Deedar Gurhmani said that he sent his daughter to the haveli of Pir of Ranipur Syed Sohail Ahmed Shah, one and a half years ago, “for trust and protection until his problems were resolved”.

    It was about a month ago that Shah called him to tell that Sana had disappeared. When Gurhmani tried to get more details, Sohail told him off.

    While the family still does not know about her whereabouts, the parents claim that the police have still not lodged a complaint regarding the girl’s disappearance despite their insistence.

    They also appealed to higher authorities to help find their daughter.

    Sindh caretaker Chief Minister Justice (retired) Maqbool Baqar has taken notice of the incident and has directed the Sukkur divisional commissioner and DIG to ensure the safe recovery of the missing girl.

    Previously, Fatima’s mother stated that her daughter had been burned with hot iron, had her hair pulled out, and was also sexually assaulted.

    As reported by Samaa news, Fatima’s mother has claimed that hundreds of teenage girls are held as maids by the Pir’s family. These girls are the daughters of mureeds, each of whom is supposed to send one girl to ‘serve’ the Pir. They are kept as domestic workers and can meet with their families only if the mureed allows it.

    According to a representative of Khairpur Civil Society (KCS), “There are mureeds who willingly entrust their children to Pirs as they view it as an honour,” while others are financially unstable and give their children at the Pir’s service so that they have shelter and food.

    The representative, however, says that not all Pirs are like this, “there are good and bad people everywhere”.

    However, social activist and a member at Sindh Human Rights Commission, Dr. Aisha Hassan Dharejo, tweeted the account of two more girls working at the haveli. They, too, have been subjected to torture and sexual abuse.

    SP Mir Rohal Khoso responded to the tweets saying that their statements have been recorded “so that the element of torture in this particular case may be evident and the case be stronger, to ensure conviction”.

    Fatima’s case

    10-year-old child named Fatima Phuriro has been found dead under suspicious circumstances in Ranipur city, District Khairpur.

    The child had been working as a domestic worker at a haveli owned by an influential local, Pir Asad Shah Jilani.

    Fatima’s mother, Shabana, was informed about the death by the employer who asked her to remove the body from the premises where two of Fatima’s sisters are also employed.

    According to DIG Sukkur Javed Jiskani, the parents initially did not share the facts of the case with the police and claimed that the girl was suffering from gastroenteritis. While her diagnosis was also confirmed by Dr Abdul Fatah Memon who treated her, the DIG revealed that Fatima was taken to the hospital either by the Pir or his staff and that the SHO was present at the time she was pronounced dead.

    It was not until videos of torture were leaked by an unknown source and circulated in social media that the case caught media’s eye. By then, the family had buried Fatima on August 15.

    As per police sources, CCTV footage from the house’s bedroom also revealed Fatima in a troubling state. In the video, the child can be seen lying on the ground. She tries to get up, then gets agitated, before collapsing. A woman later enters the room with another minor maid. They both try to wake the girl up. When they fail to do so, a man gets up from the bed and tries to shake her awake.

    Journalist Riyaz Sohail claimsedthat the police had been trying to coerce the relatives to remain silent about the incident.

    DSP Qudoos Kalwar met Fatima’s parents and reported the seriousness of the case to the DIG and demanded exhumation of the body. After being taken into confidence, Shabana revealed details to the SSP Khairpur district Rohail Khoso. “The parents were told that if they didn’t disclose facts, police will take action on their own, and they will go for exhumation and lodge a case,” the DIG said.

    Moreover, according to Dawn.com, Sindh Director General Health Dr Irshad Memon believes that the doctors’ reports about her examination needed to be verified.

    The SSP ordered to conduct a DNA test in case of apprehension of rape.

    “My daughter had a fractured arm. She had bruises and some marks — apparently of torture — were there on her body, especially around her neck and belly.”, described Shabana.

    According to Geo reports, Shabana claimed that Fatima was subjected to torture for several days and that she died as a result of multiple injuries.

    DIG Sukkur formed a team headed by an SSP, and ordered an investigation into the matter. He also ordered to that the body of the child be exhumed to verify the allegations of torture. The investigation team also includes DSP Counterterrorism Department Sukkur Abdul Qudoos Kalwar and ASP Gambat, Noman Siddiqui.

    The DIG also suspended SHO Ranipur Ameer Chang.

    Furthermore, the police arrested Pir Asad following the registration of an FIR under Sections 302 (qatl-i-amd; premeditated murder) and 34 ( acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) of the PPC on the Shabana’s complaint.

    Asad has denied all charges and said that his family’s name is being tainted. He says that Fatima’s death was caused by a stomach ailment.

    As Fatima Phuriro’s case came to the fore, rumours circulated that the alleged murderer, Pir Asad Shah Jilani, is the son-in-law of PPP vice chairman, Syed Fayyaz Shah.

    Bakhtawar Bhutto dismissed these rumours while condemning the murder in her latest tweet.

    Post-mortem report

    Qazi Asif, a Sindh based senior journalist, has on Sunday shared the autopsy report of 10-year-old Fatima who was found dead in suspicious circumstances at the haveli of a pir in Ranipur. Viral footage filmed most likely on CCTV cameras inside one of the bedrooms in the house showed the child collapsing on the ground, after rising up in a distressed state from a makeshift bed on the ground.

    A man, purportedly Pir Asad Shah Jelani, a member of the notable Pirs of Ranipur, can allegedly be seen in the video, rising from bed and trying to wake the girl up.

    The post mortem examination has confirmed her parents’ fears, revealing that the 10-year-old domestic worker was raped both vaginally and anally. The report also pointed out multiple injuries all over her body.