Spain police arrest Pakistani man in ‘love scam’ triple murder

Spanish police officers cordon off the area near the Palacio Real in Madrid, Spain, on June 28, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 23 January 2024
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Spain police arrest Pakistani man in ‘love scam’ triple murder

  • Tragedy likely linked to a fake online love affair between two sisters and two apparent US servicemen
  • Suspect had reportedly lent the sisters at least 50,000 euros, which they had never repaid

MADRID: Spanish police on Monday said they had arrested a Pakistani man in connection with the killing of three siblings in their 70s, over debts reportedly linked to an online romance scam.

The suspect turned himself in on Sunday, “admitting his involvement in incidents related to the triple murder in a house in Morata de Tajuna,” a police statement said.

Judicial sources said the suspect had previously been convicted for attacking one of the sisters with a hammer a year ago.

Police had on Thursday found the three bodies, which were partially burnt inside their home in the village some 35 kilometers (20 miles) southeast of Madrid.

Neighbours raised the alarm after not seeing the two sisters and their disabled brother for some time, with police saying their deaths were being treated as murder over a suspected debt.

Police on Monday said the man, referred to only as D.H.F.C, was the “main suspect” in the case as he had “previously injured one of the female victims last year,” with the courts confirming his arrest and conviction.

Quoting local residents, Spanish media said the tragedy was likely linked to a fake online love affair, with the two sisters embarking on what they thought was a long-distance relationship with two apparent US servicemen.

They were led to believe one had died and that the other needed money so that he could send them a multi-million-euro inheritance, causing the sisters to rack up huge debts.

Initially, they began borrowing money from neighbors.

During that time, the suspect had reportedly lent the sisters at least 50,000 euros ($55,000), which they had never repaid, prompting his violent attack on one of the sisters.

According to a statement from the Madrid region’s top court, the suspect was arrested in February 2023 at their house, where he was living as a tenant.

According to the sentence, he hit the victim “on the head, at least three times, with a hammer” then when she fell to the floor, he kicked her.

He was held in pre-trial detention until his case came to court in September when he was handed two years behind bars, slapped with a 2,900 euro ($3,150) fine and banned from being within 500 meters (1,600 feet) of the victim for two years and six months.

But under Spanish law, anyone receiving a jail term of up to two years on a first offense automatically has their sentence suspended, so he was released after agreeing to pay the compensation, the statement said.

Police initially said the suspect was 43, but court records showed that he was 42.

When they called the police last week, neighbors said they hadn’t seen the siblings since before Christmas.

Speaking to Spanish media, they said the sister had repeatedly asked to borrow large sums of money, refusing to believe it was a scam and saying they would pay it back when they got the seven-million-euro ($7.6 million) inheritance payout.

“They weren’t asking for 100 euros or 20, they were asking you for 5,000 or 6,000 euros,” one neighbor had told state-owned broadcaster TVE on Friday.

Police did not comment on those reports.


Pakistan to export halal meat worth $14.5 million to Tajikistan

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Pakistan to export halal meat worth $14.5 million to Tajikistan

  • Effective trade facilitation can increase bilateral Pakistan-Tajikistan trade to $300 million, says state media
  • PM Shehbaz Sharif approved Pakistan’s halal meat policy earlier this month in bid to boost meat exports

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will export 143,000 tons of halal meat to Tajikistan worth $14.5 million in the near future, state media reported on Tuesday amid Islamabad’s efforts to bolster trade with Central Asian countries. 

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, earlier this month, approved Pakistan’s halal meat policy that aims to boost Islamabad’s meat exports to Muslim states. 

In a high-level meeting on Dec. 24, Federal Minister for Food Security Rana Tanveer Hussain said Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Iran and other Gulf countries are ready to import Pakistani fresh meat and rice. The minister said Tajikistan has expressed the demand to import nearly 100,000 tons of meat from Pakistan. 

“According to details, Pakistan will export one hundred and forty-three thousand tons of halal meat to Tajikistan, valued at 14.5 million dollars,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported. 

It did not, however, specify a timeline as to when Islamabad planned to export the halal meat items to the Central Asian nation.

The state media said that effective trade facilitation will increase bilateral trade between Pakistan and Tajikistan to $300 million, strengthening regional economic integration.

Pakistan has recently attempted to increase its halal meat exports to other Muslim countries such as Malaysia. Both countries announced they had agreed to a $200 million halal meat trade quota during Sharif’s visit to Malaysia in October. 

A 2024 report by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) mentioned that the country exported meat worth $512 million in 2024, which included beef, mutton and poultry.

According to the PBS, the UAE remained Pakistan’s top meat export market in 2024 with exports to the Gulf nation reaching $201 million. Meanwhile, meat exports to Saudi Arabia recorded a growth of 65.1 percent last year valued at $141 million.