Pakistani court indicts man over teenage influencer killing

Pakistani court indicts man over teenage influencer killing
File Image of the 17-year-old Pakistani TikTok star Sana Yousaf, which she posted on Instagram on May 2, 2025. (Photo Courtesy: instagram/@sanayousaf22/File)
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Updated 11 min 51 sec ago

Pakistani court indicts man over teenage influencer killing

Pakistani court indicts man over teenage influencer killing
  • Sana Yousaf’s murder drew nationwide condemnation, reignited debate over women’s safety
  • The 22-year-old accused, Umar Hayat, pleaded not guilty in Islamabad’s district court Saturday

ISLAMABAD: A man accused of shooting dead a 17-year-old TikTok star at her home in Pakistan after she had repeatedly rejected his advances was formally indicted Saturday, an AFP reporter in court saw.

Sana Yousaf’s murder in June drew nationwide condemnation and reignited debate over women’s safety, after some online comments — alongside condolences — blamed her for her own death.

The 22-year-old accused, Umar Hayat, pleaded not guilty in Islamabad’s district court Saturday.

“All the allegations made against me are baseless and false,” the accused told Judge Muhammad Afzal Majoka.

Yousaf had racked up more than a million followers on social media accounts, including TikTok, where she shared videos of her favorite cafes, skincare products, and traditional outfits.

TikTok is wildly popular in Pakistan, in part because of its accessibility to a population with low literacy levels.

Women have found both an audience and income on the app, which is rare in a country where fewer than a quarter of women participate in the formal economy.

Police described the killing as a “gruesome and cold-blooded murder,” alleging Hayat killed Yousaf after she repeatedly rejected his proposals.

Some comments in social media posts sharing the news of Yousaf’s murder suggested it was justified in a society where honor codes dictate how women should behave.

“You reap what you sow,” said one comment.

Violence against women is pervasive in Pakistan, according to the country’s Human Rights Commission, and cases of women being attacked after rejecting marriage proposals are not uncommon.

In 2021, 27-year-old Noor Mukadam was beheaded by a Pakistani-American man, Zahir Jaffer, after she rejected his marriage proposal in a case that sparked widespread anger.


Pakistan brings China’s coablation cancer therapy to Lahore hospital

Pakistan brings China’s coablation cancer therapy to Lahore hospital
Updated 36 min 39 sec ago

Pakistan brings China’s coablation cancer therapy to Lahore hospital

Pakistan brings China’s coablation cancer therapy to Lahore hospital
  • The Punjab government brought the facility to Pakistan from China where Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz observed advanced treatment method
  • Pakistan this month launched the country’s first Human Papillomavirus vaccination campaign, which is running from Sept. 15 till Sept. 27

ISLAMABAD: The government in Pakistan's Punjab province has opened a coablation cancer treatment center in the eastern city of Lahore, the chief minister announced this week, with provincial authorities labelling it as the first such facility at a public sector institute in Pakistan.

The provincial government brought the facility to Pakistan from China where Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz had observed the advanced treatment method at the Xi Ji Tan & Hygea Medical Technologies.

She had signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Chinese firm to bring the advanced cancer treatment and machinery to Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, during her visit to China in Dec. 2024.

“When I visited China, I was visiting a company there and they showed me a machine. They said that ‘this machine, without surgery, without operation, without anesthesia, without the radiation therapy that is done... this machine treats cancer’,” Nawaz said at a ceremony in Sargodha.

“That tumor, whether it is unfortunately in the lungs or in the kidneys, this machine treats that tumor.”

She inspected the coablation machine installed in the surgical ward of Lahore’s Mayo Hospital and met the center’s doctors, paramedics, and cancer patients undergoing coablation treatment, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper reported.

Senior Radiologist Dr. Shehzad Kareem Bhatti briefed the CM about working mechanism of the coablation machine, which uses liquid nitrogen to freeze cancer cells at -198°C, followed by heating the affected tissue up to 83°C in a second phase to destroy targeted cancer cells.

“The procedure takes approximately 60 to 120 minutes and most patients are able to walk within a few hours post-operation. The cost of treatment per patient on the coablation machine was around Rs 1.6m,” he was quoted as saying.

The development comes days after Pakistan launched the country’s first Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination campaign, which is running from Sept. 15 till Sept. 27 and aims to protect millions from cervical cancer.

HPV is a very common virus that can cause cancers later in life, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Medical experts recommend protecting children from these cancers through the HPV vaccine.

Health Minister Mustafa Kamal said that over 5,000 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer in Pakistan each year, adding that approximately 3,500 of them lose their lives to the disease, state media reported. The minister called on parents to ensure their daughters are vaccinated, emphasizing the importance of prevention to protect girls.


Arabian Sea creeps inland, drowning sugar heartland of Pakistan’s Sindh 

Arabian Sea creeps inland, drowning sugar heartland of Pakistan’s Sindh 
Updated 20 September 2025

Arabian Sea creeps inland, drowning sugar heartland of Pakistan’s Sindh 

Arabian Sea creeps inland, drowning sugar heartland of Pakistan’s Sindh 
  • Farmers in Pakistan’s coastal Badin shift from sugarcane to rice and wheat as seawater claims fields
  • Sindh Chamber of Agriculture says Badin, Thatta districts have lost nearly 2 million hectares to sea intrusion

BADIN, Sindh: Gul Muhammad Mandhro has watched three-quarters of his farmland in coastal Badin, southern Pakistan, disappear to the Arabian Sea over the past two decades, forcing a shift from sugarcane to salt-tolerant staples such as rice and wheat.

Once known as Pakistan’s “sugar state” for its cane fields and cluster of mills, Badin district is now at the forefront of a climate-driven crisis. Sea intrusion and shrinking freshwater flows from the Indus River have left soils too saline for sugarcane, accelerating a decline that farmers say is reshaping rural livelihoods and output along the coast.

“This area was very fertile, but it has been badly affected because of the sea and cyclones,” the 71-year-old farmer, who once worked as a schoolteacher, told Arab News.

“I owned nearly 200 acres of agricultural land which has now shrunk to 50 acres,” he added, saying he now plants more climate-resilient rice and wheat on what remains of his land.

According to the Sindh Chamber of Agriculture (SCA), Badin and neighboring Thatta district have lost nearly two million hectares (about 5 million acres) of farmland to sea intrusion over the past three decades. 

Sindh is Pakistan’s second-largest province, bordering the Arabian Sea and home to the lower Indus delta.

“Due to water shortage, the sea level is rising, its water is becoming more saline,” Wafa Lateef Jokhio, SCA general secretary, said. 

He argued that Sindh was not receiving its due share of Indus waters from upstream provinces.

He added that roughly 10 million acre-feet (12.3 billion cubic meters) of freshwater should reach the Arabian Sea each year to hold back seawater encroachment: “This is not happening.”

Agronomists say the changes are also altering the chemical balance of soil.

“The soil’s pH has been affected. The ideal pH for cultivation ranges from 5.5 to 7.6 and all the crops are grown within this range, including sugarcane,” said Ahmed Khan Soomro, an agricultural economics expert.

He said pH levels have climbed to as high as 8.4 in parts of Sindh, while the loss of indigenous seed varieties such as BL4 and Thatta 10 has compounded pressure on yields.

“The sweet water is not falling into the sea due to siltation in our rivers, that’s why the ecosystem is disturbed,” added Soomro, who manages Badin district for the Sindh Rural Support Organization.

‘SUGAR STATE’

The strain is also visible in Badin’s sugar industry, once a major contributor to Sindh’s role in producing about 30 percent of Pakistan’s national sugarcane output, according to government statistics.

“Badin was called sugar state because it used to have six sugar mills operating [until 2008],” said Jokhio. “Mirza Sugar Mill and Pangrio Sugar Mills have shut down, while Ansari Sugar Mills shifted out of the district entirely because of raw material shortages.”

Farmers say economics now favor rice.

“Earlier, we used to grow sugarcane, but it wasn’t giving us a good yield,” Mandhro said. “We started sowing rice which is resilient to salinity as well as floods.”

Large landowners have also cut back.

“We are not getting a good average [yield] which has decreased to 400 maund per acre,” said Hafeezullah Bhurgri, who plants cane on only 10 percent of his 600 acres, referring to a locally used unit of weight equal to 40 kilograms. 
“Previously the production was as high as 2,000 maunds per acre.”

That decline represents a drop from about 80 metric tons per acre to 16 metric tons.

Commodity experts say the crisis, while devastating for cane growers, has opened opportunities for rice cultivators.

“We are seeing a lot of potential for exports of rice in the upcoming period,” said Ahsan Mehanti, chief executive officer at Arif Habib Commodities. “On the flipside, however, the sugarcane production has been impacted.”

For Mandhro, the pivot is pragmatic: rice keeps his fields productive as the sea inches inland.


‘Absolutely horrific’: Pakistan police arrest suspect for chopping off camel’s leg

‘Absolutely horrific’: Pakistan police arrest suspect for chopping off camel’s leg
Updated 20 September 2025

‘Absolutely horrific’: Pakistan police arrest suspect for chopping off camel’s leg

‘Absolutely horrific’: Pakistan police arrest suspect for chopping off camel’s leg
  • The incident took place in Sindh’s Sukkur district this week, with police hunting two more suspects
  • It comes a year after a landlord chopped off his camel’s leg in Sanghar, prompting public outrage

KARACHI: Police in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province said on Saturday they had arrested a suspect for chopping off the leg of a camel in Sukkur district for venturing into a field, with animal rights activists describing the incident as “absolutely horrific.”

The owner of the camel nominated Rasool Baksh Shiekh, Qurban Brohi and Malik Umar as suspects in his complaint to the police, according to Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Azhar Mughal.

The three individuals cut off the rear right leg of the animal on Thursday. Police have arrested Brohi, while the other two suspects remain on the run.

“Raids are being conducted to arrest the remaining accused,” SSP Mughal told Arab News. “Medical assistance has also been provided to injured camel by district administration.”

The incident comes a little more than a year after a similar incident in which a local landlord in Sindh’s Sanghar district allegedly chopped off a camel’s leg as punishment for daring to venture into his field, according to officials.

Caregivers at a shelter, Comprehensive Disaster Response Services (CDRS) Benji Project, worked extensively to rehabilitate the camel, nicknamed Cammie, and she was able to walk for the first time on a prosthetic leg arranged from a US-based firm in July.

Quatrina Hosain, a journalist and animal rights defender, demanded Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah ensure prosecution of suspects who had committed this “vicious cruelty.”

“It’s absolutely horrific that yet another camel is suffering from Man’s inhumanity,” she told Arab News.

“The people who brutalized Cammie were not jailed. Lack of jail time has emboldened yet another person to mutilate a helpless and voiceless camel.”

CM Shah took notice of the incident and directed local officials in Sukkur to get the animal treated and submit a report to him.

“Such treatment of speechless animals will not be tolerated under any circumstances,” Shah was quoted as saying by his office.


Pakistan says UNSC vote against lifting Iran sanctions risks Middle East instability

Pakistan says UNSC vote against lifting Iran sanctions risks Middle East instability
Updated 20 September 2025

Pakistan says UNSC vote against lifting Iran sanctions risks Middle East instability

Pakistan says UNSC vote against lifting Iran sanctions risks Middle East instability
  • A UNSC resolution aimed at halting reimposition of sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program failed Friday after weeks of diplomatic talks
  • Pakistan’s envoy Asim Iftikhar Ahmad says the Middle East region cannot afford further tensions and that diplomacy should be given a chance

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has said that it does not favor the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) decision against lifting of Iran sanctions as it risks destabilizing a region that is already mired in multiple crises, Pakistan’s UN envoy said on Friday.

A UNSC resolution aimed at halting the reimposition of sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program failed Friday after weeks of last-ditch diplomatic talks appeared to break down days before the annual UN gathering of world leaders.

The resolution put forth by South Korea, the current president of the 15-member council, did not garner the support of the nine countries required to halt the series of sanctions from taking effect at the end of the month, as outlined in Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

Only four countries, China, Russia, Pakistan and Algeria, supported the effort, with some using the meeting to blast the European leaders for what they called an unjustified and illegal action against Iran.

“We do not favor any action which risks destabilizing a region that is already mired in multiple crises. This region cannot afford further tensions,” Pakistan’s permanent representative to the UN, Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, told the council.

“We believe that even at this stage, diplomacy should be given a chance.”

Last month, France, Germany and the United Kingdom moved to trigger the “snapback mechanism,” which automatically reimposes all UN sanctions that were in effect before the nuclear deal.

Those penalties included a conventional arms embargo, restrictions on ballistic missile development, asset freezes, travel bans and a ban on producing nuclear-related technology. Iran is already reeling from a 12-day war with Israel and a decades-long financial crisis.

Using the snapback mechanism will likely heighten tensions between Iran and the West. It’s unclear how Iran will respond, given that in the past, officials have threatened to withdraw from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, potentially following North Korea, which abandoned the treaty in 2003 and then built atomic weapons.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry, in a statement on Friday, emphasized its commitment to safeguarding its interests and rights, including through diplomacy, and said it reserves the right to respond appropriately to any unlawful action.

The Pakistani envoy stressed the need to continue diplomatic engagement with Iran to address any outstanding issues in a “cooperative manner, in accordance with the rights, obligations and responsibilities of the parties.

“We must prioritize this approach and never give up on a peaceful negotiated settlement. Diplomacy and intimidation do not go together,” he added.


Pakistan warns 16 Hajj operators over payment breaches, threatens blacklisting

Pakistan warns 16 Hajj operators over payment breaches, threatens blacklisting
Updated 20 September 2025

Pakistan warns 16 Hajj operators over payment breaches, threatens blacklisting

Pakistan warns 16 Hajj operators over payment breaches, threatens blacklisting
  • Ministry says operators collected payments directly from pilgrims instead of using designated banks
  • Private Hajj quota cut to 33 percent after 63,000 people missed last year’s pilgrimage due to mismanagement

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry sent a warning letter this week to 16 private Hajj companies, saying they had been taking payments from prospective pilgrims directly instead of using designated banks while threatening to blacklist them and cancel their quota if they fail to comply.

Pakistan traditionally divides the national Hajj quota equally between government and private schemes. Last year, nearly 63,000 pilgrims were unable to perform Hajj under the private scheme due to delayed payments and mismanagement, prompting the authorities to cut the private sector quota to 33 percent this year.

The ministry noted in its letter that no vouchers had been submitted by these companies, with their deposits showing a zero balance.

“This constitutes a serious violation of the Service Providers’ Agreement (SPA), Hajj Policy and Cabinet directives,” said the letter written on Sept. 15, a copy of which is in possession of Arab News.

The ministry asked these companies to ensure immediate compliance with the SPA and submit all relevant vouchers to banks.

“Please note that failure to comply with these directions shall invite strict action, including permanent blacklisting and revocation of your quota,” it added.

Federal Minister for Religious Affairs Sardar Muhammad Yousuf told Arab News earlier this month Pakistan had filled its entire quota of 179,210 Hajj pilgrims under both the government and private schemes, adding that negotiations were underway with Saudi companies to finalize transport and accommodation arrangements.

He said the ministry had taken serious action against private Hajj operators since last year, and would review their performance this time and decide their future quotas accordingly.