Pakistan police arrest six women in Karachi for using hypnosis to rob people 

Police personnel interrogate Afghan refugees during a search operation to identify alleged illegal immigrants, on the outskirts of Karachi on November 17, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 22 September 2024
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Pakistan police arrest six women in Karachi for using hypnosis to rob people 

  • Police say inter-provincial gang has conducted robberies in Lahore, Sukkur, Hyderabad and Karachi cities 
  • Numerous cases have been reported in Karachi in the past where victims claimed they were hypnotized

KARACHI: Pakistani police arrested a gang of six suspected female robbers in the southern port city of Karachi on Sunday, accusing them of using hypnosis to rob their victims. 

Dr. Uzair Ahmed, the senior superintendent of police for investigation in the city’s Malir district, disclosed that the inter-provincial gang of women had previously committed robberies in Karachi, Hyderabad, Sukkur, Lahore and other cities of Punjab by hypnotizing their victims. 

While the scientific validity of hypnosis as a crime-inducing tool is often debated, numerous cases have been reported in Karachi in the past where victims have claimed to have been hypnotized before being robbed.

“We have arrested a gang leader and five other women for looting citizens while using hypnosis to manipulate them,” Dr. Ahmed told Arab News. 

He said the remaining members of the 25-member gang are still at large. 

“The modus operandi of the gang was that they would come to Karachi, stay in low-priced hotels in downtown Saddar, conduct robberies in various parts of the city and then return to their homes in Punjab,” Dr. Ahmed revealed.

He said the women would enter people’s homes by using various excuses, often asking for jobs or offering to sew clothes. 

“Once inside, the gang leader, an expert in hypnosis, would engage the women while others would loot them,” the police officer said.

He said the gang also had male members, whose job was to provide logistics and transportation to the women.

The arrested women have been identified as Sahiba alias Hina, Babli Maqbool, Kaneez Fareed, Sahiba Fatma, Lubna Shah, and Salman Hussain. Police said they had recovered Rs4 million [$14,418] from their possession.

“Two families of victims have also identified these women,” Dr. Ahmed said.

Various robberies over the years have been reported from Karachi in which the victims claimed they were hypnotized before robbers made away with their valuable items. 

Last year, a shopkeeper in Karachi said he was hypnotized and robbed on the city’s busy Burns Road. The suspect was later arrested and charged with the crime. 

In another incident reported from the port city in 2021, a man was robbed of Rs 3.5 million [$12,616] after being hypnotized in the city’s Gulshan-e-Iqbal area. 


Pakistan minister calls for integrating ocean awareness into education to preserve ecosystems

Updated 31 January 2026
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Pakistan minister calls for integrating ocean awareness into education to preserve ecosystems

  • Pakistan’s maritime sector posted a record $360 million profit in 2025 following a year of sweeping reforms
  • Junaid Anwar Chaudhry says education equips youth to make informed decisions, contribute to blue economy

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Maritime Affairs Minister Junaid Anwar Chaudhry has urged integrating ocean awareness into formal education systems and empowering youth as active partners in order to preserve marine ecosystems, his ministry said on Saturday.

Chaudhry said this at a meeting with Minister of State for Education and Professional Training, Wajiha Qamar, who called on him and discussed strategies for enhancing marine education, literacy, and youth engagement in sustainable ocean management.

Pakistan’s maritime sector posted a record Rs100 billion ($360 million) profit in 2025 following a year of sweeping reforms aimed at improving port efficiency, cost-cutting, and safeguarding marine ecosystems to boost the blue economy.

“Understanding our oceans is no longer optional, it is essential for climate resilience, sustainable development, and the long-term health of our maritime resources,” Chaudhry said, highlighting the critical role of marine literacy.

The minister said education equips youth to make informed decisions and actively contribute to marine conservation and the blue economy, urging inclusion of marine ecosystems, conservation and human-ocean interactions into curricula, teacher training and global citizenship programs.

“Initiatives like ‘Ocean Literacy for All’ can mainstream these elements in national policies, school programs, and community workshops to build proactive citizenship on marine challenges,” he added.

Ocean Literacy for All is a UNESCO Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission–coordinated global initiative under the UN Ocean Decade (2021–2030) that promotes ocean awareness, education, and conservation.

Chaudhry announced reforms in maritime education, including granting degree-awarding status to the Pakistan Marine Academy, and the establishment of the Maritime Educational Endowment Fund (MEEF) to provide scholarships for deserving children from coastal communities.

“The scholarship program promotes inclusive development by enabling access to quality education for youth from over 70 coastal and fishing communities, particularly in Sindh and Balochistan,” he said.

The discussions underscored raising awareness about oceans, coastal ecosystems and marine resources, according to the Pakistani maritime affairs ministry. Both ministers stressed the need to integrate climate and marine education from classrooms

to community programs, addressing risks like rising sea temperatures, coastal erosion, biodiversity loss and pollution.

“Incorporating marine science and ocean literacy into curricula can help students connect local challenges with global trends,” Qamar said, underscoring education’s transformative power in building social resilience.

The meeting explored translating complex marine science into accessible public knowledge through sustained, solution-oriented awareness campaigns, according to the maritime affairs ministry.

With coastline facing pressures from climate change, pollution, and overexploitation, the ministers called for a coordinated approach blending formal education, informal learning and youth-led advocacy.

“A joint effort by the Ministries of Maritime Affairs and Education can cultivate an ocean-literate generation, transforming vulnerability into resilience and ensuring the long-term sustainability of coastal and marine ecosystems,” Chaudhry said.