Parents of prime suspect in Noor Mukadam murder case move Supreme Court for bail

In this undated photo, Zahir Jaffer (left) poses for a pictures with his parents in UK. (Photo courtesy: Social media)
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Updated 06 October 2021
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Parents of prime suspect in Noor Mukadam murder case move Supreme Court for bail

  • Islamabad High Court rejected Zahir Jaffer’s parents’ bail plea last week
  • Mukadam was found beheaded in Islamabad on July 20, prime suspect Zahir Jaffer in custody

ISLAMABAD: The parents of Zahir Zakir Jaffer, the prime suspect in the gruesome July murder of Noor Mukadam, have approached the Supreme Court (SC) for bail nearly a week after the Islamabad High Court (IHC) rejected their bail plea.
Citing concerns of obstruction of justice, the Islamabad High court last month dismissed a bail plea filed by Zakir Jaffer and Asmat Adamjee, and ordered that the trial against them be completed within eight weeks.
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.
Key suspect Zahir Jaffer was arrested from the crime scene on the day of the murder. He was initially on police remand but was moved to Adiala Jail in the city of Rawalpindi on judicial remand in early August. His parents and three members of household staff are also under arrest for a range of charges, including abetment and hiding evidence.
In their plea to the Supreme Court Zahir Zakir Jaffer’s parents have requested the apex court to allow them “to be released on post-arrest bail pending trial.”
They also said they were ready and willing to furnish bail bonds to the satisfaction of the court and pledged “to appear before the learned Trial Court on each and every date of hearing to be fixed in the case.”


UN says 270,000 Afghans have returned from Iran, Pakistan this year

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UN says 270,000 Afghans have returned from Iran, Pakistan this year

  • UNHCR says 110,000 Afghans returned from Iran while 160,000 returned from Pakistan since start of 2026
  • Return numbers seem to have risen since Gulf war erupted on Feb. 28, says UNHCR official in Afghanistan

GENEVA: Some 270,000 Afghans have returned to their country from Pakistan and Iran so far this year, the UN said Tuesday, warning that the escalating Middle East war risked pushing the numbers higher.

UNHCR, the United Nations’ refugee agency, said that 110,000 Afghans had returned from Iran and another 160,000 had returned from Pakistan since the start of 2026.

And the numbers seem to have risen since the Middle East erupted on February 28, with the United States and Israel unleashing a barrage of strikes on Iran, and Tehran responding with drone and missile strikes on Israeli and US interests across the region.

Since then, there have been some 1,700 returns from Iran to Afghanistan each day, Arafat Jamal, UNHCR’s representative in Afghanistan, told reporters in Geneva.

Speaking from Islam Qala, on the Afghan-Iranian border, he said the situation there was “deceptively calm.”

“Returns are orderly but freighted with tension and apprehension,” he said, adding that with the hostilities elsewhere escalating, “I do fear there is more to come.”

“We are preparing for massive returns.”

He pointed out that Afghanistan was “facing the ramifications of what is happening with Iran,” while clashes have erupted along the Afghan border with Pakistan.

The new Middle East war, he warned, was “layering itself on top of an existing war on another frontier,” Jamal said.

UNHCR highlighted that the latest crises came after returns to Afghanistan had already been “exceptionally high” in recent years.

More than five million Afghans had returned from neighboring countries in the past two years, including 1.9 million returning from Iran last year alone.

Jamal warned that “many Afghan families are now facing cycles of displacement: first forced to flee Afghanistan, later displaced again inside Iran due to conflict, and now returning once more to Afghanistan.”

“And upon return in Afghanistan, the triply-displaced enter a spiral of precarity and uncertainty.”
Returns from Pakistan had meanwhile stabilized in recent weeks, as the main crossing point at Torkham remained closed due to the tensions there, Jamal said.

But he warned that “movements could increase sharply once the border reopens.”

UNHCR and the UN children’s agency UNICEF said Tuesday they were working to strengthen their capacity to operate at the borders and within Afghanistan.

But “given the scale of returns and the financial constraints facing humanitarian operations, additional support will be needed if arrivals increase,” UNHCR said, without specifying the amount needed.