The addition of Section 302 to the FIR in the killing of nine-year-old Hania Ahmed is not a procedural footnote. Rather, it is the first serious acknowledgement that this case cannot be disposed of as a tragic mistake, a confused police chase or another entry in Punjab’s growing ledger of “encounters.” Hania, an Australian citizen of Pakistani origin, was visiting Pakistan with her family when Crime Control Department personnel allegedly opened fire on their car in Chakwal. A family that had reportedly been robbed at gunpoint found itself caught between criminals and the armed authority of the state.
The shift from Section 322 to Section 302 matters because it changes the legal character of the case from fatal misadventure to alleged intentional killing. But no one who has covered the law enforcement agencies for any length of time should mistake a stronger penal section for accountability. The arrest of the named CCD official, Shuja, the reported recovery of the weapon and judicial remand are necessary steps. However, they are only the beginning of a case that must now be insulated from the very command chain under scrutiny.
Punjab’s crime problem is real. Robberies, dacoities, street crime and organised gangs have corroded public confidence for years, and police personnel often operate in dangerous conditions with poor prosecution support and intense political pressure to show results. Punjab Police has also claimed sharp reductions in property crimes, robbery, murder and street crime since the creation of the CCD. Yet even if every percentage point claimed by the department were accepted, the legal answer would remain the same: a province governed by law cannot replace investigations and trials with post-facto justification.
Human Rights Commission of Pakistan documented at least 670 CCD-led encounters in 2025, resulting in 924 suspect deaths, while only two police officials were killed in the same period. The department and the government may dispute the interpretation, but the scale itself demands scrutiny.
To add to the tragedy, we have been here numerous times before. In the 2019 Sahiwal killings, Muhammad Khalil and his family were shot dead by CTD personnel in what was initially framed as an intelligence-based encounter. A year earlier, Naqeebullah Mehsud’s killing in Karachi exposed the old architecture of the alleged fake encounters. The Model Town murders similarly showed how lethal police action can easily become mired in questions of command responsibility. It took scathing video evidence and public pressure in the Sarfaraz Shah and Intizar Ahmed cases to show that police accountability is legally possible when the prosecution is able to build a coherent case.
Hania Ahmed’s case must not be allowed to travel the same road. The Punjab government should order an independent judicial inquiry, remove the investigation from CCD’s internal control, and review CCD’s rules of engagement across districts. The province cannot afford another Sahiwal. It must prove, this time, that the law can reach the men who carry guns in its name. *