PM Sharif welcomes Muslim congresswoman Ilhan Omar, hopes for stronger relations with US

US Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (second left) calls on Pakistan's Prime Minister, Shehbaz Sharif, in Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 20, 2022. (PID)
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Updated 20 April 2022
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PM Sharif welcomes Muslim congresswoman Ilhan Omar, hopes for stronger relations with US

  • Omar holds meetings with President Arif Alvi, former prime minister Imran Khan
  • Among other issues, ‘Islamophobia’ comes up for discussion during her meetings

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday welcomed Muslim congresswoman Ilhan Omar on her first visit to Pakistan while hoping that her journey to the country would lead to the deepening of people-to-people ties and strengthening of parliamentary exchanges between Pakistan and the United States.
Sworn into office in January 2019, Omar made history when she became one of the first two Muslim-American women elected to the US Congress.
She also gained popularity in Pakistan for raising her voice against the situation in Indian-administered Kashmir.
“The Prime Minister underscored that Pakistan valued its long-standing relationship with the United States and wanted to further deepen bilateral cooperation based on mutual respect, trust, and equality,” said a statement issued by the PM Office after the meeting. “He highlighted that constructive engagement between the two countries could help promote peace, security and development in the region.”
The prime minister emphasized the need to further enhance cooperation between the two countries in the fields of trade and investment.
He said it was important to make concerted efforts on the international level “to deal with the scourge of Islamophobia.”
The US lawmaker also held meetings with President Arif Alvi and ex-PM Imran Khan.
Former human rights minister Shireen Mazari tweeted a picture of Omar meeting former premier Khan, disclosing that the two discussed Islamophobia and related issues.
“Ilhan Omar expressed her admiration for @ImranKhanPTI & his position on & work against Islamophobia globally,” Mazari wrote in a Twitter post. “IK appreciated her courageous & principled position on issues.”

Separately, Omar met President Alvi where the latter told her that Pakistan valued its close relations with the United States.

Omar is known for raising her voice for equality and human rights around the world.
Born in Somalia, she was forced to leave her country when the Somali civil war broke out. She spent four years in a refugee camp in Kenya before migrating to the US in the 1990s.
Apart from holding meetings with officials and other high-profile personalities in Islamabad, she will also visit Lahore and Pakistan-administered Kashmir to get greater understanding of the country’s cultural, social, political, and economic potential.


After Karachi mall fire kills 73, burned remains turn recovery into forensic nightmare

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After Karachi mall fire kills 73, burned remains turn recovery into forensic nightmare

  • Extreme heat, structural collapse and fragmented bodies slow identification, prolonging anguish for dozens of families
  • Limited disaster-forensics capacity leaves Pakistani authorities relying on DNA, bone analysis and mobile records

ISLAMABAD: Over a week after a catastrophic fire killed at least 73 people at Karachi’s Gul Plaza shopping complex, authorities are grappling with a grim reality: many victims are so badly burned that identifying them has become a forensic ordeal, leaving dozens of families trapped in agonizing uncertainty.

Officials say around 73 sets of human remains have been recovered from the site of the January 17 blaze, but only 23 victims have been formally identified. In many cases, intense heat inside the enclosed commercial building destroyed soft tissue and degraded DNA, reducing bodies to fragments that complicate both recovery and forensic confirmation.

“Unfortunately, in some cases only body remains were recovered, and those remains were in such a condition that when touched they were turning into powder,” said Daniyal Siyal, a spokesperson for the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation.

Globally, fires in densely packed, multi-story commercial buildings are among the most difficult disasters to investigate. Prolonged exposure to extreme temperatures can destroy DNA, collapse reinforced concrete floors and fuse human remains with debris. Even in countries with advanced disaster victim identification systems, such conditions often delay confirmation for weeks or months.

In Pakistan, where urban fires are frequent but forensic disaster response capacity remains limited, those challenges are compounded.

Gul Plaza housed more than 1,200 shops stacked vertically, with narrow stairwells, limited ventilation and heavy electrical loads. Rescue officials say the structure acted like a furnace, trapping heat and toxic gases long after flames were brought under control.

As a result, recovery operations quickly shifted from rescue to retrieval, and from retrieval to painstaking forensic work.

SCIENCE AS THE LAST HOPE

All recovered remains have been transferred to medico-legal facilities, where Karachi Police Surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed is overseeing the identification process.

Only seven victims have been identified through facial recognition or identity documents recovered from pockets. For most families, science is now the only path to closure.

“The challenges that we are facing here are because of the heat damage that has been done to the body, to the remains,” Dr. Syed told Arab News. “In this instance, it is particularly challenging because the bodies are burnt to the extent that most of the DNA is unsalvageable.”

Forensic teams have collected samples from 45 deceased individuals and 54 reference samples from family members. But when DNA testing fails, a common outcome in prolonged high-temperature fires, investigators must rely on secondary methods.

“We hope that they are identifiable but if they aren’t by DNA, we have the anthropological measurements, anthropological data, CDR records and proof of presence to fall back on,” Dr. Syed said.

Those methods include bone analysis to estimate age and height, mobile phone call detail records placing individuals inside the building, and personal effects recovered from specific locations within the debris.

Earlier this week, a senior official involved in recovery efforts, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the process itself had further complicated identification.

According to the official, heavy excavators operated by untrained workers were used to clear debris, resulting in bags of remains that sometimes contained mismatched limbs. In some instances, the official said, remains counted as a single body weighed only three kilograms.

FAMILIES WAITING WITHOUT CLOSURE

Outside the destroyed plaza and at Karachi’s medico-legal facilities, families of the missing continue to wait after submitting DNA samples.

Rehman Khan, the uncle of 22-year-old victim Muhammad Arif, spent four days at the site of the inferno. He eventually joined rescue teams himself, helping pull nearly 30 sets of remains from the rubble.

He believed one of them was his nephew, but all were beyond recognition.

“Now for the past two or three days, we have been coming here in the morning and sitting here until evening,” Khan said.

“Now if we even get a body, that would be a very big thing. The chances of life itself have ended.”

Among those still unaccounted for is 18-year-old salesman Ibrar Akram, whose family says he died trying to help others escape.

“He was showing them the way,” his cousin Farhan Hafeez told Arab News.

Hafeez, who survived the blaze after escaping from his own shop in the building’s basement, said Akram helped at least four people find an exit before turning back inside.

“He went back inside and did not come back,” he said. “Today, it has been seven days since he went missing. What is the government doing?”

For Akram’s mother, Afsari Begum, the technical explanations offer no relief.

“I don’t want anything. I just want my Ibrar,” she said, her voice breaking down. 

Indeed, for families still waiting, the plea has narrowed to one request: dignity.

“Do not give us a body in pieces,” Hafeez said. “Give us our loved one whole, so that we at least know it is ours.”

A fact-finding committee appointed by the Sindh chief minister is investigating the cause of the fire, though its report has not yet been released. Authorities say facilities and resources are available to complete identification.

“We have facilities available here in Karachi, and we also have a DNA laboratory in Hyderabad. There is no issue regarding resources. All necessary resources are available to us,” Siyal said.