Provincial minister accused of triple murder after mutilated bodies found in Pakistan’s southwest

A group of protesters sit right next to the coffins of a woman and her two sons in Quetta, Pakistan, on February 22, 2023, accusing a provincial minister of triple murder and demanding his arrest. (@paank_bnm/Twitter)
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Updated 22 February 2023
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Provincial minister accused of triple murder after mutilated bodies found in Pakistan’s southwest

  • Balochistan government forms a joint investigation team after bodies of a woman, her two sons were found in a remote district
  • People take the bodies to Quetta to stage a sit-in while accusing communications minister of holding the family in a private jail

QUETTA: Dozens of people in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province started a sit-in on Tuesday after the mutilated bodies of a woman and her two sons were found in a well who they said had been killed by a provincial minister while calling for his arrest.

The protesters maintained the family had been illegally detained in a private jail for the last four years by communications minister Sardar Abdul Rehman Khetran, adding the prison was inside his residence in Barkhan and that he had also ordered the killing of the woman and her two sons.

The protesters brought all three bodies to Quetta, the capital of Balochistan, to stage the sit-in in front of the chief minister’s residence.

“We demand the immediate arrest of Sardar Abdul Rehman Khetran for the triple murder and want the government to recover five other children of the same family who are still locked inside the jail in Barkhan,” Jahangir Marri, secretary general Marri Ittehad Pakistan, which organized the demonstration, told the media at the demonstration.

He said the husband of the slain woman, Khan Muhammad Marri, was hiding since he feared for his own life after Khetran threatened him with dire consequences a few years ago.

“The chief justice of Pakistan should intervene in the matter to save the lives of five other innocent children,” he continued.

Last week, the slain woman, Giran Naz, said in a video statement that Khetran had detained her along with her sons in a private jail at his residence. She requested the Pakistani authorities to take action and secure the release of her family while holding the Holy Qur’an in her hands.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province in terms of landmass, is inhabited by hundreds of tribes which are led by chieftains who are frequently accused of depriving their people of basic facilities.

The Balochistan administration decided to form a joint investigation team (JIT) to probe the triple murder case and arrest the culprits involved in the crime.
“Chief Minister Balochistan Mir Abdul Quddus Bizenjo has ordered the inspector general Police to form a JIT,” the provincial government’s spokesperson Farah Azeem Shah told Arab News. “The government will soon get to the bottom of this case.”

The Balochistan police raided Khetran’s residence on Tuesday, though it did not make any arrests after an hours-long search operation.

Meanwhile, the provincial minister described the incident as a “conspiracy” to tarnish his reputation while expressing his willingness to cooperate with the investigators in the matter.

“I have been in Quetta for the last 11 days,” he told Arab News. “The bodies were found on Tuesday. The chief minister has formed a JIT and the heirs of the slain family did not appear before the police to register a complaint against me or my companions.”

Khetran also dismissed reports that claimed he had a private jail at his residence.

The triple murder case led to an outrage on social media where many government officials and rights activists demanded the immediate arrest of the perpetrators of the crime.

Khetran told the local media the allegations had been brought against him within the context of elections this year while blaming one of his own sons, Inam Shah, of being part of the conspiracy to remove him as tribal chief.

Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper said Shah denied the claim while confirming “the three people whose bodies were recovered from the well had been kept in his father’s ‘private jail.’”


Pakistan warns of landslides, avalanches in northwest amid snowfall forecast

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Pakistan warns of landslides, avalanches in northwest amid snowfall forecast

  • Provincial authority warns snowfall may cause road closures, slippery conditions in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa districts in next 24 hours
  • Disaster management authority urges people to exercise caution, avoid unnecessary traveling during next 24 hours in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

PESHAWAR: Pakistan has warned of landslides and avalanches in the hilly areas of northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) in the next 24 hours, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) said on Monday, advising the public to remain cautious and avoid unnecessary travel.

In a weather forecast issued by the PDMA KP, the authority warned that snowfall may cause road closure and slippery conditions in the northwestern Naran, Kaghan, Dir, Swat, Buner, Malakand, Kohistan, Mansehra, Abbottabad, Shangla and Galliyat districts in the next 24 hours.

“Possibility of landslides/avalanches in hilly areas of the province during the [24 hours] period,” PDMA said. 

“Travelers and tourists are advised to remain extra cautious and avoid unnecessary travel during the period.”

It also warned of foggy conditions in patches at scattered places over Peshawar, Mardan, Nowshera, Charsadda Swabi and D.I. Khan districts during late nights and early mornings in northwestern Pakistan. 

Pakistan, which contributes less than one percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, is recognized among countries that are most vulnerable to climate change.

Scientists say rising temperatures are making South Asia’s monsoon rains more erratic and intense, increasing the risk of flash floods and landslides in mountainous regions such as KP and northern Gilgit-Baltistan.

Authorities in the past have urged people to avoid northern areas or exercise caution in travel when weather conditions are expected to deteriorate in winter season. 

At least 21 people, including nine children, died in freezing temperatures after being stuck in their vehicles in the Pakistani hill station of Murree in January 2022 when the roads became impassable.