13-year-old pleads guilty for DC carjacking that killed Pakistani Uber driver

This undated file photograph shows Mohammed Anwar, a Pakistani national who was murdered during a carjacking incident in Washington DC, United States. (Photo courtesy: GoFundMe)
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Updated 04 June 2021
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13-year-old pleads guilty for DC carjacking that killed Pakistani Uber driver

  • Mohammad Anwar was working as an UberEats driver when a 13-year-old girl and 15-year-old girl carjacked him in March
  • Anwar tried to gain control of the car and accelerated, hit a tree and several parked cars, and flipped the car, he died at a local hospital 

ISLAMABAD:  A 13-year-old girl has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the fatal carjacking of a Pakistani-origin Uber Eats driver, Mohammad Anwar, in March, international media reported on Friday. 

Other charges will be dropped. Under the maximum sentence, she would be released once she turns 21.

The second carjacker, a 15-year-old girl, pleaded guilty to felony murder last month in juvenile court. Both girls are in the custody of the DC Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services and face years in juvenile detention.

Anwar, of Springfield, Virginia, was in a gray sedan and working as an Uber Eats driver when the girls asked him for a ride near the Navy Yard Metro station, prosecutors said. Anwar had driven just a few blocks when the girls, armed with a stun gun, tried to steal his car.

Anwar tried to gain control of the car and accelerated, hit a tree and several parked cars, and flipped the car. Medics took him to a hospital, where he died. 

Anwar was a father and grandfather with loved ones in the US and Pakistan, his family said. 

“He was a hardworking immigrant who came to the US in 2014 to build a better life for himself and his family. The loss for his family is immeasurable,” they said in a statement that called the crime “senseless.”
 


Pakistan says repaid over $13.06 billion domestic debt early in last 14 months

Updated 29 January 2026
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Pakistan says repaid over $13.06 billion domestic debt early in last 14 months

  • Finance adviser says repayment shows “decisive shift” toward fiscal discipline, responsible economic management
  • Says Pakistan’s total public debt has declined from over $286.6 billion in June 2025 to $284.7 billion in November 2025

KARACHI: Pakistan has repaid Rs3,650 billion [$13.06 billion] in domestic debt before time during the last 14 months, Adviser to the Finance Minister Khurram Schehzad said on Thursday, adding that the achievement reflected a shift in the country’s approach toward fiscal discipline. 

Schehzad said Pakistan has been repaying its debt before maturity, owed to the market as well as the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), since December 2024. He said the government had repaid the central bank Rs300 billion [$1.08 billion] in its latest repayment on Thursday. 

“This landmark achievement reflects a decisive shift toward fiscal discipline, credibility, and responsible economic management,” Schehzad wrote on social media platform X. 

Giving a breakdown of what he said was Pakistan’s “early debt retirement journey,” the finance official said Pakistan retired Rs1,000 billion [$3.576 billion] in December 2024, Rs500 billion [$1.78 billion] in June 2025, Rs1,160 billion [$4.150 billion] in August 2025, Rs200 billion [$715 million] in October 2025, Rs494 billion [$1.76 billion] in December 2025 and $1.08 billion in January 2026. 

He said with the latest debt repaid today, the July to January period of fiscal year 2026 alone recorded Rs2,150 billion [$7.69 billion] in early retirement, which was 44 percent higher than the debt retired in FY25.

He said of the total early repayments, the government has repaid 65 percent of the central bank’s debt, 30 percent of the treasury bills debt and five percent of the Pakistan Investment Bonds (PIBs) debt. 

The official said Pakistan’s total public debt has declined from over Rs 80.5 trillion [$286.6 billion] in June 2025 to Rs80 trillion [$284.7 billion] in November 2025. 

“Crucially, Pakistan’s debt-to-GDP ratio, around 74 percent in FY22, has declined to around 70 percent, reflecting a broader strengthening of fiscal fundamentals alongside disciplined debt management,” Schehzad wrote. 

Pakistan’s government has said the country’s fragile economy is on an upward trajectory. The South Asian country has been trying to navigate a tricky path to economic recovery under a $7 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund.