Karachi’s top police surgeon who has seen it all tells other women: ‘Don’t give up’

Dr. Summaiya Syed, a police medical examiner, is seen working at her office in Karachi, Pakistan, on March 7, 2023. (AN Photo)
Short Url
Updated 08 March 2023
Follow

Karachi’s top police surgeon who has seen it all tells other women: ‘Don’t give up’

  • Dr. Summaiya Syed was appointed head of Sindh’s medico-legal department in Pakistan’s largest city in June last year
  • Syed has faced many hardships, including sexual harassement, during a decades-long career as a police medical examiner

KARACHI: Dr. Summaiya Syed has faced many hardships, including sexual and psychological harassment, during a decades-long career as a police medical examiner in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province.

But the difficulties have all paid off.

In June last year, Syed was appointed the top police surgeon in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, heading a medico-legal department in which she has herself seen many ups and downs in a career spanning almost 30 years.

Today, her message for other women on International Women’s Day is simple: “Don’t give up.”

“Giving up was not, never an option for me, never an option,” Syed, 50, told Arab News in an interview in Karachi. 

“I have faced my own share of threats, my own share of blackmailings, my own share of physical harassment, sexual harassment, psychological harassment ... I’ve faced it all, as a woman medico-legal officer, as a senior woman medico-legal officer, as [an] additional police surgeon.”




This picture taken in Karachi, Pakistan, on March 7, 2023, captures a list of names that mentions the previous occupants of Dr Summaiya Syed’s office, showing the top medico-legal officials in the city were mostly men in the past. The only woman appointed to the post in December 2015 spent only 17 days on the job, making Syed the longest-serving woman police surgeon in Karachi. (AN Photo)

Syed qualified as a doctor in 1996 and joined the Sindh health department as a “medico-legal officer,” the term for a medical examiner who conducts autopsies and investigates the cause and manner of death and injuries at government hospitals.

It was a profession few women chose at the time but Syed says she has never looked back.

Before Syed, only one other woman was appointed the police surgeon in Karachi, in December 2015, but spent only 17 days on the job, making Syed the longest-serving woman police surgeon in Karachi. Now, among her aims as a leader in her field is to fix gender imbalances in the medico-legal department as well as the health industry in general.

Karachi, a city of over 15 million people, currently has only 29 medico-legal officers, of which just seven are women, a figure Syed said was “not at all compatible” with the number of women victims of assault.

Last year, health facilities reported 626 cases of sexual assault on women and children. Among over 34,000 people who were brought to the police for examination in various cases, 5,325 were women.

“We are getting around 20 cases of women and children per day [at Abbasi Shaheed hospital], maybe one or two female dead bodies as well,” Syed said, referring to one of Karachi’s largest public hospitals.

“But I just have one WMLO [woman medico-legal officer] over there. So that is not at all compatible.”

One way in which Syed tries to tackle the problem is by making her department more accessible, especially by being available herself through social media.  

“People contact me out of the blue that their case is not being addressed or they’re waiting for some kind of, you know, treatment or medical legal documentation, they contact me directly,” she said.

“We are not turning away women who don’t come with police letters, we don’t turn back children whose parents are not bringing police letters.”  

And under Syed, the Karachi police medico-legal department has also started assessing victims of sexual assaults based on their psychological condition, which was not practiced previously.

According to Syed, sexual assault affects all three modalities — physical, sexual and psychological — of a victim.  

“We only were previously concerned with sexual [trauma], but now we talk about physical injuries as well,” she said. “And we talk about psychological trauma.”

Anti-rape crisis cells set up by the Sindh government last year to provide medico-legal certificates, psychological support and legal services to sexual abuse victims would now have a full-time psychologist available for trauma victims, Syed said, including those who had been through “intimate partner violence,” which involves physical and sexual violence, stalking and psychological aggression by a spouse.

“This was a groundbreaking thing,” Syed said. “And I’m extremely proud to have been a part of it.”

Along her journey, the doctor said, she was supported by family, especially her father and husband.

And though she was thankful for this, she added:

“Even if the men in your life are not allowing you to fly, you should still fly.”

In her office, a poster hanging on the wall read: “Don’t make me walk when I want to fly.”


No casualties as blast derails Jaffar Express train in Pakistan’s south

Updated 26 January 2026
Follow

No casualties as blast derails Jaffar Express train in Pakistan’s south

  • Passengers were stranded and railway staffers were clearing the track after blast, official says
  • In March 2025, separatist militants hijacked the same train with hundreds of passengers aboard

QUETTA: A blast hit Jaffar Express and derailed four carriages of the passenger train in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province on Monday, officials said, with no casualties reported.

The blast occurred at the Abad railway station when the Peshawar-bound train was on its way to Sindh’s Sukkur city from Quetta, according to Pakistan Railways’ Quetta Division controller Muhammad Kashif.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bomb attack, but passenger trains have often been targeted by Baloch separatist outfits in the restive Balochistan province that borders Sindh.

“Four bogies of the train were derailed due to the intensity of the explosion,” Kashif told Arab News. “No casualty was reported in the latest attack on passenger train.”

The Jaffar Express stands derailed near Abad Railway Station in Jacobabad following a blast on January 26, 2026. (AN Photo/Saadullah Akhtar)

Another railway employee, who was aboard the train and requested anonymity, said the train was heading toward Sukkur from Jacobabad when they heard the powerful explosion, which derailed power van among four bogies.

“A small piece of the railway track has been destroyed,” he said, adding that passengers were now standing outside the train and railway staffers were busy clearing the track.

In March last year, fighters belonging to the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) separatist group had stormed Jaffar Express with hundreds of passengers on board and took them hostage. The military had rescued them after an hours-long operation that left 33 militants, 23 soldiers, three railway staff and five passengers dead.

The passenger train, which runs between Balochistan’s provincial capital of Quetta and Peshawar in the country’s northwest, had been targeted in at least four bomb attacks last year since the March hijacking, according to an Arab News tally.

The Jaffar Express stands derailed near Abad Railway Station in Jacobabad following a blast on January 26, 2026. (AN Photo/Saadullah Akhtar)

Pakistan Railways says it has beefed up security arrangements for passenger trains in the province and increased the number of paramilitary troops on Jaffar Express since the hijacking in March, but militants have continued to target them in the restive region.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s southwestern province that borders Iran and Afghanistan, is the site of a decades-long insurgency waged by Baloch separatist groups who often attack security forces and foreigners, and kidnap government officials.

The separatists accuse the central government of stealing the region’s resources to fund development elsewhere in the country. The Pakistani government denies the allegations and says it is working for the uplift of local communities in Balochistan.