Pakistan police arrest TV cameraman on suspicion of wife’s murder in Karachi

Residents gather as police personnel inspect a site cordoned off with barricade tapes in Karachi on May 8, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 30 August 2025
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Pakistan police arrest TV cameraman on suspicion of wife’s murder in Karachi

  • Police complaint cites domestic violence after Kulsoom Abdi found stabbed in flat
  • Women’s rights activist calls the killing part of rising femicides, demands justice

KARACHI: Police in Pakistan have arrested a television cameraman on charges of murdering his wife, who was found stabbed to death in their home in Karachi, officials said Saturday.

Qamar Abdi, a cameraman for a private news channel, was arrested after his wife’s family named him as the suspect in a First Information Report (FIR), the initial police complaint, according to Dr. Farrukh Raza, a Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) for Karachi’s East District.

“The accused, who works as a news cameraman, has been arrested for the murder of his wife,” Raza told Arab News. “The woman was brutally murdered with knife cuts on her body.”

According to the FIR, filed by the victim’s brother, Asim Ahmed, the killing took place on Friday morning in the couple’s rented flat in the Soldier Bazaar neighborhood, where they were living with their only daughter for the last four years. Ahmed told police he received a call from Abdi around 12:55 PM on August 29, saying, “Kulsoom has been murdered, hurry up and come home.”

Upon arriving at the scene, Ahmed found a police vehicle and an ambulance, and his sister’s body lying on the floor, covered with a black cloth.

Ahmed’s statement to the police described a history of domestic violence. He alleged that for the past four years, Abdi had been physically abusive, used drugs, and was financially dependent on his wife, who sewed clothes to make ends meet.

He said that his sister had previously left Abdi for two months due to the abuse but returned after her husband came to their family home and convinced her to come back.

They had married 15 years ago in a “love marriage,” a South Asian term commonly used for marriages based on mutual choice rather than family arrangement.

SSP Raza confirmed that police had collected samples from the crime scene, including samples from the couple’s daughter, who is believed to have been drugged during the incident.

“The case is under investigation and the results of the samples are also awaited,” he added.

The murder of Kulsoom is just one in a series of brutal killings of women in Karachi, often occurring in the privacy of homes. Only days earlier, another woman was allegedly killed by her husband in Orangi Town, and in Qur’angi, a husband was arrested for allegedly slaughtering his wife with a knife.

Authorities suspect domestic disputes to be the primary cause of these deaths, which frequently occur in the presence of the couple’s children.

The recent killings have brought renewed attention to the pervasive issue of gender-based violence (GBV) in the country. A March report by the Sustainable Social Development Organization (SSDO) stated that over 32,617 GBV cases were recorded in the first half of 2024 nationwide.

Despite the high number of incidents, activists say conviction rates remain low due to underreporting, patriarchal attitudes and a weak legal system.

Qurrat Mirza, a founding member of Aurat March Karachi, a women’s rights movement, condemned the latest killing, calling it part of a larger pattern.

“Another week another woman,” she said. “These are not isolated incidents. They are part of a horrifying pattern where patriarchy, silence and impunity feed domestic violence.”

“These tragedies reflect how deeply rooted patriarchal norms, lack of anger management and notions of control over women’s lives normalize violence within marriages,” he added.

Mirza stressed the need for a change in societal attitudes and called for urgent action.

“Women deserve safety, dignity and justice, not graves inside their homes,” she said.


Pakistan to launch AI screening in January to target fake visas, agent networks

Updated 05 December 2025
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Pakistan to launch AI screening in January to target fake visas, agent networks

  • New system to flag forged-document travelers before boarding and pre-verify eligibility
  • Move comes amid increasing concern over fake visas, fraudulent agents, forged papers

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will roll out an AI-based immigration screening system in Islamabad from January to detect forged documents and prevent illegal overseas travel, the government said on Thursday. 

The move comes amid increasing concern over fake visas, fraudulent agents and forged papers, with officials warning that such activity has contributed to deportations, human smuggling and reputational damage abroad. Pakistan has also faced scrutiny over irregular migration flows and labor-market vulnerability, particularly in the Gulf region, prompting calls for more reliable pre-departure checks and digital verification.

The reforms include plans to make the protector-stamp system — the clearance required for Pakistani citizens seeking overseas employment — “foolproof”, tighten labor-visa documentation, and cancel the passports of deportees to prevent them from securing visas again. The government has sought final recommendations within seven days, signalling a rapid enforcement timeline.

“To stop illegal immigration, an AI-based app pilot project is being launched in Islamabad from January,” Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said following a high-level meeting chaired by him and Minister for Overseas Pakistanis Chaudhry Salik Hussain.

Naqvi said the new screening technology is intended to determine travelers’ eligibility in advance, reducing airport off-loads and closing loopholes exploited by traffickers and unregistered agents.

The interior minister added that Pakistan remains in contact with foreign governments to improve the global perception and ranking of the green passport, while a uniform international driving license will be issued through the National Police Bureau.

The meeting also approved zero-tolerance measures against fraudulent visa brokers, while the Overseas Pakistanis Ministry pledged full cooperation to streamline the emigration workflow. Minister Hussain said transparency in the protector process has become a “basic requirement,” particularly for labor-migration cases.

Pakistan’s current immigration system has long struggled with document fraud, with repeated cases of passengers grounded at airports due to forged papers or agent-facilitated travel. The launch of an AI screening layer, if implemented effectively, could shift the burden from manual counters to pre-flight verification, allowing authorities to identify risk profiles before departure rather than after arrival abroad.

The reforms also come at a moment when labor mobility is tightening globally. Gulf states have begun demanding greater documentation assurance for imported labor, while European and Asian destinations have increased scrutiny following trafficking arrests and irregular-entry routes from South Asia. For Pakistan, preventing fraudulent departures is increasingly linked to protecting genuine workers, reducing deportation cycles and stabilizing the country’s overseas employment footprint.