Dead for a dollar: Man accused of pushing wife to death off Karachi building

Police officers stand guard on a street at a residential area in Karachi, Pakistan, on June 18, 2020. (AFP/File)
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Updated 12 December 2022
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Dead for a dollar: Man accused of pushing wife to death off Karachi building

  • Pakistan sees thousands of violence against women cases each year, including rape, domestic abuse, honor killings
  • Husband suspected of killing wife after she failed to return Rs300 deposited with local store to buy milk for infant child

KARACHI: A man in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi is suspected and under arrest for pushing his wife to her death from the fourth floor of a building following a quarrel over Rs300 ($1.33), police said on Monday.

Pakistan sees thousands of cases of violence against women every year, from rape and acid attacks to sexual assault, kidnappings, domestic abuse and so-called honor killings. Most incidents go largely unreported, particularly in rural areas, where poverty and stigma prevent victims from speaking out.

A United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) report released last month said 32 percent of women in Pakistan had experienced violence.

About the latest incident, police said the suspect, identified as Muhammad Adil, a security guard at a fuel station, had a fight with his wife Mayrium, 21, on Saturday that involved money.

Adil, now booked for murder, had given his wife Rs1,500 on Friday, police said, but when she returned the money the following day, it was Rs300 short.

“Adil pushed his wife off the building after she told him that she had deposited Rs300 at a shop to buy milk for their four-year-old son,” Amin Solangi, Station House Officer (SHO) at Risala Police station told Arab News, saying neighbors called the police.

The officer said the suspect initially said the death was an accident but later confessed to murdering his wife while he was being interrogated.

“They [neighbors] said the couple was quarreling and after a while the woman fell off the fourth floor of the Zubaida Building near Lady Dufferin Hospital of the city,” Solangi said.

“The woman was going to bring back the money from the milk shop situated beneath the building, but her husband ended her life before she could do that,” the officer added.

The death comes less than a month after a man allegedly killed his wife and three daughters with a dagger in Karachi and then attempted suicide with the same weapon.


IMF mission meets Pakistani officials ‘on the ground’ for loan reviews

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IMF mission meets Pakistani officials ‘on the ground’ for loan reviews

  • Visiting team carries out third and second reviews under two IMF funding programs
  • The delegation meets central bank officials in Karachi as tranche decision looms

KARACHI: An International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff mission has begun review talks in Pakistan that will determine the release of the next tranche under the country’s $7 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and the $1.4 billion Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF), officials familiar with the discussions said on Thursday.

The visit marks the formal launch of negotiations under the third EFF review and the second RSF review, both seen as critical to sustaining Pakistan’s fragile economic recovery and maintaining external financing stability. The discussions are expected to focus on fiscal consolidation, monetary policy, structural reforms and climate-related benchmarks tied to the RSF program.

“The team is on the ground now,” an IMF official told Arab News, requesting not to be named as the talks are ongoing.

The visiting IMF mission began its meetings in Pakistan’s commercial capital, Karachi, where they met banking regulators at the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), the officials said.

Last week in Washington, IMF Director of Communications Julie Kozack said the staff team would begin review talks with Pakistani authorities from Feb. 25.

The IMF official declined to share details of the review agenda, saying: “It will be hard to answer the rest of your questions as the team is busy with meetings on the ground. We will post a press release at the conclusion of the mission.”

IMF staff missions typically conclude review talks within a fortnight, with any remaining discussions continuing virtually if the review is not finalized during the visit.

Separately, a senior SBP official confirmed the IMF delegation’s presence in Karachi but declined to provide details.

“Yes, the IMF team was here yesterday,” he told Arab News. “They held meetings at the central bank. I don’t know about the details of their discussion but can confirm only this much for now.”

The central bank plays a key role in IMF reviews, as the Washington-based lender has urged Pakistan’s monetary policymakers to maintain interest rates at “appropriately tight” levels to contain inflation, which, though declining from its peak, remains a concern.

The SBP in January defied market expectations for a rate cut and kept its benchmark policy rate at 10.5 percent, a move analysts said aligned with IMF program requirements.

“We don’t have any idea about who is part of the mission, how long they will stay here [in Karachi] and when and who they will meet there [in Islamabad],” the SBP official said.

The IMF communications director said last week that Pakistan’s recent performance under the program had improved.

“Pakistan’s policy efforts under the EFF have helped stabilize the economy and rebuild confidence,” Kozack told reporters in response to a query.

“Pakistan currently has a primary fiscal surplus of 1.3 percent of GDP in fiscal year 2025, which was in line with program targets,” she added. “Headline inflation has been relatively contained. And Pakistan posted its first current account surplus in 14 years in fiscal year 2025.”

The $7 billion EFF program, secured in 2024, aims to stabilize Pakistan’s economy through fiscal discipline, market-determined exchange rates and structural reforms.

The $1.4 billion RSF complements it by supporting climate resilience and sustainability reforms.