KARACHI: In a shocking development, new grim details have emerged in the investigation report of Mustafa Amir’s brutal murder by suspect Armaghan.
According to investigation report, Mustafa was dragged down the stairs with his hands and feet tied by a white piece of cloth. He was later taken to Balochistan in the trunk of his own car where he set on fire along with his car.
Furthermore, before Mustafa was killed, Armaghan also allegedly assaulted a girl with an iron rod on January 5. The report also disclosed that Armaghan arranged an online cab for the girl as he let her go while also threatening her to not pursue legal actions against him.
Mustafa then went to Armaghan’s house on January 6 where he went missing. Armaghan hit Mustafa with an iron rod, dragging him down the stairs with his hands and feet tied. The prime suspect then put the victim in his car’s trunk and procured petrol from his own house which he later used to burn the car along with Mustafa Amir.
The high-profile case continues to shock the nation as details of drug trafficking, assault, money laundering, and arrests of multiple individuals have taken place after Armaghan’s arrest.
Mustafa Amir’s case unfolds drug trafficking
Investigations also led to the arrest of actor Sajid Hasan’s son, Sahir’s, arrest in trafficking narcotics. The resulting crackdown has caused the weed supply to stop completely, causing massive losses to drug dealers in Karachi.
Mustafa’s murder and Armaghan’s arrest has uncovered a massive drug network that had been operating in the city’s elite neighborhood for years.
Mustafa Amir, a 23 years old BBA student, was kidnapped and murdered on January 6 by his friends, Armaghan and Shiraz. After the police raided Armaghan’s residence in DHA, the authorities met armed resistance from Armaghan on February 8.
Geo News reported that the high-end weed market in Karachi is dominated by three kinds of drugs:
Jungle Boy which is sold at Rs15,000 per gram; Gelato, which is priced at Rs12,000 per gram; and Pamela, which costs Rs10,000 per gram.
Perpetrators sued dark web, social media and mobile applications for delivery of drugs. Some courier companies were also used to traffick drugs.
Read more: Prime suspect Armaghan confesses to torturing and killing Mustafa Amir