Police arrest five for beating, stripping four women naked in Pakistani market

This photograph released by the Punjab Police on December 7, 2021, shows men arrested on charges of assaulting four women, stripping them naked and filming them in Faisalabad, Pakistan. (Photo courtesy: @OfficialDPRPP/Twitter)
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Updated 07 December 2021
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Police arrest five for beating, stripping four women naked in Pakistani market

  • Arrests came after videos of incident went viral, prompting Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar to take notice
  • Incident of public assault comes just days after a mob lynched a Sri Lankan factory manager in Sialkot city over alleged blasphemy

ISLAMABAD: Five men have been arrested on charges of assaulting four women, stripping them naked and filming them in a marketplace in Faisalabad this week, police in Pakistan’s Punjab province said on Tuesday.
The incident of public assault comes just days after a Muslim mob lynched and burnt the body of a Sri Lankan factory manager in the city of Sialkot over accusations he had committed blasphemy.
Punjab Police said on Twitter two of the suspects were arrested on Monday night and three on Tuesday. The arrests came after videos of the men stripping and beating the women went viral on social media, prompting Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar to take notice.

 

 

Inspector General Punjab “is pursuing a zero tolerance policy on incidents of violence and harassment against women and children,” the tweet said.
A first information, or police, report (FIR) has been registered against four named suspects, according to the Dawn newspaper including Saddam, the owner of a shop called Usman Electric Store. Another 10 unidentified suspects are also mentioned in the report.
The suspects have been charged under sections 354-A (assault or use of criminal force against a woman and stripping her), 509 (insulting modesty or causing sexual harassment), 147 (punishment for rioting) and 149 (unlawful assembly guilty of an offence committed in prosecution of common object) of the Pakistan Penal Code.
According to the FIR as quoted by Dawn, the complainant, a woman garbage collector, went to Bawa Chak Market with three other women to collect garbage on Monday at around 10:30am. The woman said the group entered Saddam’s store and asked for water but the owner started screaming at them and saying they had entered with the intent to commit robbery. The other suspects entered the shop on hearing the ruckus, Dawn reported, and subsequently started beating up the women. They then stripped them naked and dragged them through the market.
"They continued to beat us for around an hour and made our videos in naked condition," the FIR quoted the complainant as saying.
The suspects only let the women go when their family members arrived at the market and passersbys gathered, pleading that the women be set free.
"The suspects committed gross injustice by stripping us, dragging us through the market and torturing us and strict action should be taken against them," the complainant said in the FIR.
Violence against women in Pakistan, including rape and domestic abuse, are common in Pakistan.
In 2018, a Thomson Reuters Foundation survey of about 550 experts said Pakistan was the sixth most dangerous and fourth worst in terms of economic resources and discrimination for women as well as the risks women face from cultural, religious and traditional practices, including so-called honor killings. Pakistan also ranked fifth on non-sexual violence, including domestic abuse.


Pakistan Navy seizes $3 million of narcotics in Arabian Sea under regional security patrol

Updated 07 December 2025
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Pakistan Navy seizes $3 million of narcotics in Arabian Sea under regional security patrol

  • Official statement says the haul was made during an anti-narcotics operation conducted by PNS Yamama
  • Seizure comes after a record haul of nearly $972 million was reported in the North Arabian Sea in October

KARACHI: Pakistan Navy said on Sunday a patrol vessel operating in the Arabian Sea had seized 1,500 kg of narcotics, the latest interdiction under a regional maritime security deployment aimed at curbing illicit activity along key shipping routes.

The operation took place under the Regional Maritime Security Patrol (RMSP), a Pakistan-led initiative that deploys naval assets across the Arabian Sea and adjoining waters to deter smuggling, piracy and other non-traditional security threats.

The framework combines independent patrols with coordination involving regional and international partners.

“Pakistan Navy Ship Yamama, while deployed on Regional Maritime Security Patrol in the Arabian Sea, successfully conducted an anti-narcotics operation, leading to the seizure of 1,500 kilograms of hashish valued at approximately 3 million US dollars,” the Navy said.

The interdiction, it added, underscored the force’s “unwavering commitment to combating illicit activities and ensuring security in the maritime domain.”

Pakistan Navy said it routinely undertakes RMSP missions to safeguard national maritime interests through “robust vigilance and effective presence at sea,” and continues to play a proactive role in collaborative maritime-security efforts with other regional navies.

The seizure comes amid heightened counter-narcotics activity at sea.

In October, a Pakistani vessel seized a haul worth nearly $972 million in what authorities described as one of the largest drug seizures ever reported in the North Arabian Sea.

Last month, Pakistan Navy units operating under a Saudi Arabia-led multinational task force seized about 2,000 kg of methamphetamine, valued at roughly $130 million, highlighting the role of regional cooperation in disrupting trafficking networks.