'Free to go anywhere she wants,' Lahore court rules in Karachi teen marriage case

The photograph taken from the video shows Dua Zehra speaking. (Photo courtesy: Screengrab from the video posted on social media)
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Updated 26 April 2022
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'Free to go anywhere she wants,' Lahore court rules in Karachi teen marriage case

  • Dua Zehra, who disappeared from her home in Karachi, was recovered by Lahore police Tuesday 
  • Parents of the girl say she is not an adult and should be handed over to child protection bureau

KARACHI: A court in Lahore on Tuesday ruled that Dua Zehra, a teenaged girl who was found in Punjab nine days after her disappearance from her home in Karachi, was "free to go anywhere she wants" after she told the judge she was an adult and had married a boy of her own free will. 

Zehra had gone missing from Karachi’s Al-Falah area on April 16, after she went out of her house to throw thrash. Her father said they live on the first floor of the building and his daughter had gone down to the ground floor to dump trash, but didn’t return. 

A video of the girl surfaced online on Tuesday in which she claimed she had tied the knot with a boy, Zaheer Ahmed, of her own free will and she should be allowed to live freely. 

The Lahore police confirmed her recovery in a Twitter post, saying the teenager and her husband were currently at the District Police Office (DPO) in Okara. She was then taken to Lahore and presented before a judicial magistrate, who turned down the police request to shift Zehra to Darul Aman (shelter home). 

Before the judgment, the judge sent the husband of the girl outside the courtroom to record her statement.  

Zehra told the judge that she was 18 years of age, came from Karachi to Lahore willingly, and she did not want to go to Darul Aman. "I am safe, my life is not in danger," she added. 

After listening to the girl, the judge ruled that she is "free to go anywhere she wants." 

The teenager said her father, Mehdi Kazmi, wanted her to marry her cousin and would beat her to force her for the marriage. She said she was living happily with her husband, Ahmed. 

Zehra recorded the statement under duress, Kazmi said at a press conference in Karachi on Tuesday. 

"She said I would torture her which is totally wrong. My daughter was first kidnapped and now being forced to give a statement in their favour," the father told reporters, appealing to Sindh chief minister to help bring his daughter back. 

"My daughter is underage and not an adult. She should be brought back and kept with the child protection department," he said, adding he wanted fair trial in the case. 

Zehra's mother said Ahmed befriended her daughter while gaming online and misguided the girl to “kidnap” her. 

Last week, an official overseeing the technical side of the case told Arab News Karachi police investigators believed the girl had not been kidnapped, but instead someone “trapped” her through an online gaming platform that served as the source of contact with her. 

Zehra is not the only teenager who went missing in Karachi, but two more teenaged girls disappeared from the port city in recent days. All three have now appeared in different cities of Punjab. 

Nikahnamas (marriage certificates) of two of the girls, Zehra and Nimra Kazmi, have surfaced as well, while the family of the third girl has not yet formally lodged a complaint with the police. 

Speaking to Arab News on Tuesday, Ghulam Nabi Memon, the additional inspector-general of police in Karachi, said the law enforcers were in touch with their counterparts in Lahore regarding the recovery of the girls. 

"It appears that these girls had left their homes of their own will," Memon said. 

Nuzhat Shirin, chairperson of the Sindh Commission on the Status of Women, on Monday said provincial authorities had received nikahnamas of both Zehra and Nimra. 

“The family of Dua has shown us her Form-B, according to which she is 14, whereas the nikahnama shows her 18-year-old,” Shirin told Arab News. 

She said once the girl returned to Karachi, she would be kept with the child protection department, and that her marriage doesn’t stand as the law in Sindh requires a girl to be 18 to be married. 

In Punjab, the law allows a 16-year-old to legally tie the knot. 


Pakistan, ADB sign $730 loan agreements to boost SOE reforms, energy infrastructure

Updated 25 December 2025
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Pakistan, ADB sign $730 loan agreements to boost SOE reforms, energy infrastructure

  • Both sign $330 million Power Transmission Strengthening Project and $400 million SOE Transformation Program loan agreements
  • Economic Affairs Division official says Transmission Project will secure Pakistan’s energy future by strengthening national grid’s backbone

KARACHI: Pakistan and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) on Thursday signed two loan agreements totaling $730 million to boost reforms in state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and energy infrastructure in the country, the bank said.

The first of the two agreements pertains to the SOE Transformation Program worth $400 million while the second loan, worth $330 million, is for a Power Transmission Strengthening Project, the lender said. 

The agreements were signed by ADB Country Director for Pakistan Emma Fan and Pakistan’s Secretary of Economic Affairs Division Humair Karim. 

“The agreements demonstrate ADB’s enduring commitment to supporting sustainable and inclusive economic growth in Pakistan,” the ADB said. 

Pakistan’s SOEs have incurred losses worth billions of dollars over the years due to financial mismanagement and corruption. These entities, including the country’s national airline Pakistan International Airlines, which was sold to a private group this week, have relied on subsequent government bailouts over the years to operate.

The ADB approved the $400 million loan for SOE reforms on Dec. 12. It said the program seeks to improve governance and optimize the performance of Pakistan’s commercial SOEs. 

Karim highlighted that the Power Transmission Strengthening Project will enable reliable evacuation of 2,300 MW from Pakistan’s upcoming hydropower projects, relieve overloading of existing transmission lines and enhance resilience under contingency conditions, the Press Information Department (PID) said. 

“The Secretary emphasized that both initiatives are transformative in nature as the Transmission Project will secure Pakistan’s energy future by strengthening the backbone of the national grid whereas the SOE Program will enhance transparency, efficiency and sustainability of state-owned enterprises nationwide,” the PID said. 

The ADB has supported reforms by Pakistan to strengthen its public finance and social protection systems. It has also undertaken programs in the country to help with post-flood reconstruction, improve food security and social and human capital. 

To date, ADB says it has committed 764 public sector loans, grants and technical assistance totaling $43.4 billion to Pakistan.