Pakistani Officials Apologize for Fatal Shooting of Perth Girl, Police Pursue Murder Charges
نظرة سريعة
- Pakistani officials apologized for the fatal shooting of 9-year-old Hania Ahmed, who was mistaken for robbers by police.
- The officer involved faces murder charges for violating protocols, including failing to confirm targets before firing.
- The family disputes some police accounts of the incident.
ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي
لماذا يهم
A 9-year-old girl from Perth was fatally shot by Pakistani police who mistook her family for robbers. The incident has led to apologies from officials and murder charges against the officer involved.
Pakistani officials have apologised for the fatal shooting of a nine-year-old Perth girl and outlined the violation of protocols that led to her death, as police pursue murder charges against the officer involved.
Hania Ahmed had travelled to Pakistan with her family on holiday, and was visiting relatives in the city of Chakwal when she was fatally shot by police who mistook the family for robbers.
Pakistan's Crime Control Department (CCD) told local media the officer involved had not confirmed the identity of the targets before opening fire, in violation of standard protocol.
CCD superintendent Shah Meer Khalid said the officer also failed to aim at the tyres of the vehicle which the family were driving.
"We are with the family in this moment of grief. We are investigating the mistake committed by the CCD officer in this incident."
Superintendent Khalid said an information report had been registered under section 302 of the Pakistan Penal Code, which deals with murder.
He said the findings of the police investigation would be presented to the court within days.
"Once [the initial report] is submitted, we will move an application in court to request a speedy trial of this case," he said.
Case of mistaken identity
The officer involved, who remains in custody, was passing by when the family was being held at gunpoint by two thieves.
The officer responded to the incident and exchanged gunfire with the robbers, who fled the scene.
When the family also attempted to drive away, the officer believed their vehicle had been stolen by the robbers and opened fire at the car, according to CCD.
Some details of the police account of the incident have been disputed by Hania's father Adeel Ahmed, who was also wounded in the shooting along with his 11-year-old son.
Mr Ahmed alleged the police started shooting first, while police claim the officers only fired their weapons in retaliation.
Superintendent Khalid said it was a fast-moving situation which unfolded within "five to 10 seconds", and the incident did not reflect any failures in the CCD's training standards.
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However, both the family and legal advocates have raised concerns about the CCD's use of force.
Concerns about police force
Pakistan Supreme Court advocate Mohammad Azhar Siddique has lodged a writ in the Lahore High Court alleging the fatal shooting of Hania Ahmed was not an isolated incident.
"[The] tragic incident is not an isolated lapse but symptomatic of a structural failure,"
"Fact-finding by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and other credible sources has already documented hundreds of CCD 'encounters' in which suspects were killed in highly questionable circumstances.
"Indicating a deliberate policy of lethal force rather than lawful policing."
Following the shooting, local police said they formed "special teams" to arrest the robbers who had held the family at gunpoint, and the two suspects were killed in a "police encounter".
ما الذي يجب مراقبته
توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق
Murder charges against the officer will proceed to a speedy trial.
مرجح · خلال أشهر
أسئلة مفتوحة
- Were there systemic failures in CCD training?
- What is the full extent of questionable 'encounters'?
- Will the court expedite the trial as requested?


