Teenaged girl, suspect in motorcycle thefts, arrested in Karachi

Security personnel patrol a street in Karachi on February 18, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 23 February 2023
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Teenaged girl, suspect in motorcycle thefts, arrested in Karachi

  • The 17-year-old is said to be a trained biker who rides around the city in male getup
  • The country’s port city has witnessed a major surge in street crimes in recent years

KARACHI: Police in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province arrested a teenage girl suspected of stealing motorbikes in Karachi, confirmed an official on Thursday.

The country’s port city, which was once known for political, sectarian and ethnic violence, has witnessed a major surge in street crimes in recent years.

The paramilitary Rangers launched an operation to quell lawlessness in the city in 2013 which led to the arrest of some of Karachi’s most-wanted men.

“We received a complaint from a person that a girl living in the jurisdiction of our police station had sold him a stolen motorbike,” Ghulam Rasool Arbab, station house officer at Baldia Town, told Arab News. “We pretended to be buyers and called her. When she showed up on Wednesday, we arrested her.”

Arbab said the girl identified herself as Samreen alias Meesha and also sold several motorbikes in Hub city located in the neighboring province of Balochistan.

“The girl is a trained biker who rides across the city in male getup,” he continued, adding she was 17-year-old and was in the business of selling motorbikes for the last seven months.

Speaking to Arab News, Chaudhry Arif, an officer of the Anti-Vehicle Lifting Cell, said the girl would be produced in the case of bike-theft which had already been registered against her in a police station in the Clifton neighborhood.

“We are also trying to arrest her male accomplice,” he added.

According to available statistics, street crime incidents in Karachi increased from 39,884 in 2013 to 85,502 in 2022.

The incidents in which the residents of the city lost their motorbikes surged from 18,074 in 2013 to 50,107 in 2022, registering a 177.23 percent increase.


Pakistan party calls Sindh resolution against new provinces ‘unconstitutional’

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Pakistan party calls Sindh resolution against new provinces ‘unconstitutional’

  • The development follows calls to separate Karachi from Sindh amid governance concerns intensified by a deadly mall fire last month
  • Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan calls for a referendum in urban areas of Sindh for the establishment of a new administrative unit

ISLAMABAD: The Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P) political party on Sunday criticized the Sindh provincial government for adopting a resolution in the provincial assembly against the creation of new provinces, describing it as “illegal, unconstitutional.”

The resolution was adopted on Saturday after fresh demands by the MQM-P and other voices to grant Karachi a provincial or federal status following governance challenges highlighted by a deadly mall fire earlier this year that killed 80 people.

Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city that is home to more than 20 million, is the country’s main commercial hub and contributes a significant share to the national economy.

Speaking at a press conference, MQM-P’s Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui said the Constitution of Pakistan provided procedure for establishing new provinces, but a province had “carried itself as if it were a separate country,” referring to Saturday’s resolution.

“Anything in contrast with the constitution cannot be adopted. This is illegal, unconstitutional, undemocratic,” he said, calling for a referendum in urban areas of Sindh for the establishment of a new administrative unit in the region.

Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah had tabled the resolution in the assembly on Saturday, condemning what he described as “divisive statements” about breaking up Sindh or detaching Karachi.

“The province that played a foundational role in the creation of Pakistan cannot allow the fragmentation of its own historic homeland,” Shah told lawmakers, citing Article 239 of Pakistan’s 1973 Constitution, which requires the consent of not less than two-thirds of a provincial assembly to alter provincial boundaries.

“If any such move is attempted, it is this Assembly — by a two-thirds majority — that will decide,” he said.

The resolution reaffirmed that Karachi would “forever remain” an integral part of Sindh and directed the provincial government to forward the motion to the president, prime minister and parliamentary leadership for record.

Calls to alter Karachi’s status have periodically surfaced amid longstanding complaints over governance, infrastructure and administrative control in the megacity, though no formal proposal to redraw provincial boundaries has been introduced at the federal level.

Taha Ahmed Khan, a senior MQM-P member, acknowledged that his party had “presented its demand openly on television channels with clear and logical arguments” to separate Karachi from Sindh.

“It is a purely constitutional debate,” he told Arab News on Saturday. “We are aware that the Pakistan Peoples Party, which rules the province, holds a two-thirds majority and that a new province cannot be created at this stage. But that does not mean new provinces can never be formed.”