Zahir Jaffer moved to separate cell after ‘arguments’ with inmates — superintendent jail

Zahir Zakir Jaffer (second right), main suspect in the July 20 murder of Noor Mukadam, is led by Islamabad police officers to the court in Islamabad, Pakistan, on August 2, 2021. (Photo courtesy: Social Media)
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Updated 06 September 2021
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Zahir Jaffer moved to separate cell after ‘arguments’ with inmates — superintendent jail

  • Prime suspect in Noor Mukadam murder denied right to watch TV, visit library or walk in jail courtyard
  • Jail authorities have also denied his under arrest parents’ plea to be given B-class status in prison

LAHORE: Zahir Jaffer has been moved to a separate cell after an argument with inmates and was now being kept alone, said Arshad Warriach, the superintendent of Adiala Jail where the prime suspect in the grisly July murder of Noor Mukadam is being held. 

Mukadam, 27, was found beheaded at a residence in Islamabad’s upscale F-7/4 neighborhood on July 20 in a case that has sparked public outrage and grabbed media attention unlike any other recent crime against women. Jaffer, who was arrested from the crime scene on the day of the murder, was initially on police remand but moved to Adiala Jail on judicial remand in early August. 

Speaking exclusively to Arab News, the jail superintendent said Jaffer, who had been sharing a cell, was moved to a separate space after “arguments” with his cellmates. 

“His [Jaffer’s] behavior was not right with his cellmates so now we have put him alone,” Warriach said. “He wasn’t getting along [with them] They said, ‘we don’t want to stay with him,’ he said, ‘I can’t stay with them.’”

Last month, Warraich told Arab News Jaffer was sharing a cell with two other prisoners and being kept on ‘suicide watch,’ while then Punjab minister for prisons Fayyaz ul Hassan Chohan had said the accused murderer was not even being allowed a tooth brush over “suicide fears.”

However, Warriach said on Saturday Jaffer was now living alone in a cell, with a police guard deployed outside to watch him 24 hours. He also said the prisoner’s demand for certain rights granted to other inmates had been turned down.

“He has demanded that he be kept like the other prisoners … They can walk in the prison yard, they can get books from the library, they read newspapers, they can watch a TV given by the government … they can get extra things from their home, make tea,” Warriach explained. “He doesn’t have any of these facilities. He only comes out of the cell on the day of hearing.”

Asked if Jaffer had received any legal support from the US Embassy, the jail superintendent said: “Being an American national, Zahir Jaffer was allowed to make a phone call to embassy officials to seek legal assistance, but no such help has come so far.”

Jaffer’s parents — Zakir Jaffer and Asmat Adamjee — and members of their household staff were also arrested on July 24 for “hiding evidence and being complicit in the crime.”

Warraich confirmed that the parents of the prime suspect had requested for B-class status in prison, which is reserved for inmates who by social status, education or habit of life have been accustomed to a superior mode of living and under which they are entitled to books, newspapers, a 21-inch television along with personal bedding, clothing and food. 

Warriach said the parents’ request to upgrade their status had been denied.

“Yes, the Jaffers have moved the court against us for B-class, but we have not entertained any such request until now,” he said, adding that they were being allowed the right to meet “first blood” relatives once a week either at hearings or at the prison, “from behind bars.”

The jail superintendent also denied that any preferential treatment, such as home cooked food, was being allowed to anyone involved in the Noor Mukadam case. 

“Home cooked food is not the right of any prisoner,” he said. 

Reports that Jaffer was taken to Islamabad’s PIMS hospital after he complained of a headache early last month, that he was receiving home cooked food in jail daily and that he always appeared before the district magistrate bathed and in a fresh set of clothes unleashed widespread condemnation in Pakistan, with social media users, journalists and activists saying the suspect was being given special treatment because he belonged to a wealthy family and was a US national.

Then prisons minister Chohan subsequently ordered prison authorities to stop with “immediate effect” any preferential treatment for Jaffer at Rawalpindi’s Adiala Jail.

“I’ve ordered the jail superintendent that no VIP treatment should be given to Zahir or his family and he should not even be allowed to meet his father who is in another barrack at the same jail,” Chohan said in a phone interview last month. “They are not in jail to celebrate birthday parties.”
 


Pakistan issues over $7 billion sukuk in 2025, nears 20 percent Shariah-compliant debt target

Updated 29 December 2025
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Pakistan issues over $7 billion sukuk in 2025, nears 20 percent Shariah-compliant debt target

  • Finance Adviser Khurram Schehzad says this was the highest-ever Sukuk issuance in a single calendar year since 2008
  • Pakistan’s Federal Shariat Court ordered in 2022 the entire banking system to transition to Islamic principles by 2027

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Finance Adviser Khurram Schehzad on Monday said the country achieved a landmark breakthrough in Islamic finance by issuing over Rs2 trillion ($7 billion) sukuk this year, bringing it closer to its 20 percent Shariah-compliant debt target by Fiscal Year 2027-28.

A sukuk is an Islamic financial certificate, similar to a bond, but it complies with Shariah law, which forbids interest. Pakistan’s Federal Shariat Court (FSC) had directed the government in April 2022 to eliminate interest and align the country’s entire banking system with Islamic principles by 2027.

Following the ruling, the government and the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) have undertaken a series of measures, including legal reforms and the issuance of sukuk to replace interest-based treasury bills and investment bonds.

“In 2025, the Ministry of Finance (MoF) through its Debt Management Office, together with its Joint Financial Advisers (JFAs), successfully issued over PKR 2 trillion in Sukuk,” Schehzad said on X, describing it as “the highest-ever Sukuk issuance in a single calendar year since 2008 by Pakistan.”

Pakistan made a total of 61 issuances across one-, three-, five- and 10-year tenors, according to the finance adviser. The country also successfully launched its first Green Sukuk, a Shariah-compliant bond designed to fund environment-friendly projects.

He said the Green Sukuk was 5.4 times oversubscribed, indicating investor demand was more than five times higher than the amount the government planned to raise, which showed strong market confidence.

“The rising share of Islamic instruments in the government’s domestic securities portfolio (domestic debt) underscores strong momentum, growing from 12.6 percent in June 2025 to around 14.5 percent by December 2025, clearly positioning the MoF to achieve its 20 percent Shariah-compliant debt target by FY28,” Schehzad said.

“This milestone also reflects the structural deepening of Pakistan’s Islamic capital market, sustained investor confidence, and the strengthening of sovereign debt management.”

He said Pakistan was strengthening its government securities market by making it more resilient, diversified, and future-ready, supported by a stabilizing macroeconomic environment, a disciplined debt strategy, and a clear roadmap for Islamic finance.