Interpol-wanted Pakistani arrested in Indonesia 

Pakistani fugitive Muhammad Luqman Butt is arrested by Indonesian police in Asahan, North Sumatra, on Jan. 21, 2020. (Photo courtesy: Interpol Indonesia)
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Updated 23 January 2020
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Interpol-wanted Pakistani arrested in Indonesia 

  • Butt has confessed to killing a family of four in Pakistan
  • He was living under a fake identity in North Sumatra

JAKARTA: A Pakistani national who was on Interpol’s wanted list for nine years has been arrested by Indonesian police in North Sumatra.

According to a press release by the police’s Mobile Brigade (Brimob), the 34-year-old man, identified as Muhammad Luqman Butt, alias Husein Shah or M. Firman, was arrested at his rented house in Asahan district on Tuesday.

His Indonesian wife, 33-year-old Evi Lili Midati, has also been detained.

The police said Butt confessed he had murdered four people in Pakistan and has been in Indonesia for the past two years. Some five months ago, he moved to Asahan, not far from the province’s capital of Medan to work as a driver.

The police chief investigator in the province, Andi Rian, said the fugitive was arrested at the request of Pakistan, in coordination with Interpol, local media reported.

“After we identified that the fugitive is in Indonesia, the Interpol national central bureau in Indonesia coordinated with the North Sumatra police to arrest him,” Rian was quoted as saying.

Rian added that Butt will be deported to Pakistan where he would face prosecution.

The police seized from Butt’s house his Indonesian identity card bearing the name M. Firman with his photo, and citing Asahan as his place of birth.

Butt confessed he had murdered a family of four when he was 25 years old. He committed the murder in retaliation for the killing of his brother by one of the victims and had been on the run ever since. Two years ago, he entered Indonesia by sea, on a wooden boat from Malaysia.


Pakistan business body writes to PM seeking ‘clear roadmap’ to spur investment

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Pakistan business body writes to PM seeking ‘clear roadmap’ to spur investment

  • Business confidence in Pakistan has fallen sharply amid rising inflation, high energy costs and unpredictable tax environment
  • In a letter written to PM Shehbaz Sharif, the Pakistan Business Forum president highlights challenges facing the business community

KARACHI: The Pakistan Business Forum (PBF), a representative body of traders and businesspersons in the country, on Monday urged Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s intervention in outlining a “clear economic roadmap” to promote long-term investment in Pakistan.

Business confidence in Pakistan has fallen sharply amid rising inflation, high energy costs and an unpredictable tax environment. Currency volatility and slowing demand have prompted many firms to delay investments and scale back expansion plans.

In a letter to PM Sharif, PBF President Khawaja Mehboob-ur-Rehman highlighted the challenges facing the business community, including high input costs, soaring energy tariffs and an increasingly “uncompetitive” tax regime that weakens exports.

“Looking ahead to 2026, the Pakistan Business Forum urged the prime minister to provide the business community with a clear, credible, and forward-looking economic roadmap,” read a PBF statement.

“Such clarity... is essential to restore confidence, encourage investment, and enable long-term planning by businesses.”

The South Asian country of more than 241 million people is currently navigating a tricky path to economic recovery under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) program since averting a default in 2023.

Besides introducing structural reforms relating to expansion of the country’s tax base and privatization of loss-making entities, the government of PM Sharif says it is taking various measures to boost foreign investment and trade.

The PBF highlighted the business community is ready to play its role in competing with regional markets, if provided with the “necessary competitive tools.” It outlined critical reforms relating to regionally competitive electricity tariffs and corporate tax rates.

An increase in electricity tariffs would put further strain on industries and could lead to widespread downsizing and the closure of industrial units, according to the PBF.

It urged the government to include business representatives in the policymaking process to ensure it understands “on-ground realities.”