‘Last good deed’: Pakistani lawyer killed in Islamabad blast after helping strangers

Special ‘Last good deed’: Pakistani lawyer killed in Islamabad blast after helping strangers
The picture, shared on November 12, 2025, shows lawyer Zubair Ghumman (center), who was killed in a suicide blast outside a district court complex in Islamabad’s G-11 sector on November 11, 2025, standing with his friends. (Aslam Ghumman’s friend)
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Updated 2 min 49 sec ago

‘Last good deed’: Pakistani lawyer killed in Islamabad blast after helping strangers

‘Last good deed’: Pakistani lawyer killed in Islamabad blast after helping strangers
  • Zubair Ghumman died after giving a ride to an elderly couple to the G-11 district court
  • Suicide bombing in Pakistan’s capital on Tuesday killed 12 people and injured 36 others

ISLAMABAD: Senior lawyer Aslam Ghumman’s heart skipped a beat when television channels broke the news of a blast in Islamabad’s G-11 sector. His son, Zubair Ghumman, had gone to that area only minutes earlier.

Twelve people were killed and 36 wounded when a deadly suicide explosion took place outside a district court complex in Islamabad’s G-11 sector. 

Pakistan has suffered an uptick in militant violence in recent months in its western provinces bordering Afghanistan. Islamabad blames the attacks on militants based in Afghanistan, a charge Kabul denies.

The suicide bombing on Tuesday was the deadliest attack in Islamabad in years. And just as his father feared, Zubair was among the 12 who perished in the blast. 

“I called him… he didn’t pick up,” Ghumman recalled, his voice breaking. “Then a friend answered and told me, ‘He’s injured. We’re taking him to PIMS [Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences] hospital.’”




Police officials inspect the cordoned-off site, a day after the suicide bombing, in Islamabad on November 12, 2025. (AFP)

Ghumman frantically reached the hospital only to find out that his son had passed away.

His son, Zubair, had recently enrolled as an advocate of Pakistan’s top court.

‘LAST GOOD DEED’

According to Ghumman, his son was not supposed to be at the G-11 district court that morning. He was to attend the hearing of a case at a high court in the nearby G-10 sector.

An elderly couple with their daughter saw Zubair there and asked him for directions to G-11. Instead of pointing the way, he offered to drive them there.

Ghumman said his son reached the main gate of the district court and told the couple “this is G-11.”

“They went inside. He was turning back toward the car when the blast took place,” an emotional Ghumman said.

“That was his last good deed,” he continued. “Allah helped him leave this world while doing good.”




The picture, shared on November 12, 2025, shows lawyer Zubair Ghumman (second left), who was killed in a suicide blast outside a district court complex in Islamabad’s G-11 sector on November 11, 2025, standing with his friends. (Aslam Ghumman’s friend)

A fellow lawyer, Hafiz Ahmed Rasheed, described Zubair as an “asset to the legal fraternity.”

“He was very sociable, professional and very hardworking when it came to his profession,” Rasheed said.

“He was very friendly with his friends. He was a humble person.”




Yahya Zubair (C) son of deceased lawyer, mourns during his father's funeral in Islamabad on November 12, 2025, a day after suicide bombing. (AFP)

CHAOS EVERYWHERE

Assistant Sub-Inspector Muhammad Irshad, who was in a police car patrolling near the district court when the blast took place, recalled the explosion and the chaos that followed.

“A blast suddenly took place. I don’t know what happened after that,” Irshad said while undergoing treatment at PIMS hospital. “There was chaos.”

Head Constable Muhammad Imran, who was driving the patrol car, also survived the blast. He is also undergoing treatment at PIMS. 

“Our morale is high. By the grace of God, we will fight,” Imran said. “We are not afraid of such [violent] elements.”

Meanwhile, Ghumman’s grief slowly turned to anger. He questioned how “terrorists” who kill innocents believe they will go to paradise through such actions.

“They kill innocent people. What can be more unjust than this?” he wondered.

“The killing of one person is like killing the entire humanity,” he added, referring to a Qur’anic verse upholding the sanctity of human life.


Sri Lanka players ask to leave Pakistan after bombing, board says no

Sri Lanka players ask to leave Pakistan after bombing, board says no
Updated 12 November 2025

Sri Lanka players ask to leave Pakistan after bombing, board says no

Sri Lanka players ask to leave Pakistan after bombing, board says no
  • Sri Lanka are playing three ODIs followed by T20 tri-nation series in Pakistan this month 
  • Suicide bombing in Islamabad on Tuesday made Sri Lankan players fear for security

Some Sri Lanka cricketers requested to return home from their Pakistan tour on Wednesday for safety reasons after a suicide bombing in Islamabad, but their board issued a stern directive to stay put or face consequences.

Sri Lanka are touring Pakistan, playing three one-day internationals followed by a Twenty20 tri-series along with Zimbabwe this month. Sri Lanka are scheduled to play Pakistan in the second ODI on Thursday in Rawalpindi. 

But the bombing, which killed 12 people in Pakistan's capital Islamabad, made several Sri Lankan players ask to go home, the Sri Lanka Cricket board said in a statement. Rawalpindi and Islamabad are twin cities hardly 20 km (12 miles) apart.

"SLC immediately engaged with the players and assured them that all such concerns are being duly addressed in close coordination with the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) and the relevant authorities to ensure the safety and well-being of every member of the touring party," the SLC said.

'CONTINUE WITH  TOUR' 

"In this context, SLC has instructed all players, support staff and team management to continue with the tour as scheduled," SLC added.

Any player who returns despite the directive will be replaced immediately to avoid disrupting the tour, it said.

If anyone does that, however, "a formal review will be conducted to assess their actions, and an appropriate decision will be made upon the conclusion of the review."

SLC did not respond to a question on the number of players and staff who requested to return home.

Pakistan had been struggling to convince sports teams to visit the country after gunmen attacked a bus carrying touring Sri Lanka cricket players in the city of Lahore in 2009.

At least six players were injured, and visits by international teams came to a halt as Pakistan played their "home" matches in the United Arab Emirates.

But security has improved since then in major urban centers and test cricket returned when Sri Lanka toured in 2019.

In this series, Pakistan won the first ODI, which was also held in Rawalpindi, by six runs on Tuesday.