The Federal Investigation Agency’s (FIA) cybercrime and anti-money laundering teams have begun questioning Armaghan and Shiraz, key suspects in the high-profile Mustafa Amir murder case.
However, Armaghan, appearing intoxicated, failed to provide any clear answers during the interrogation.
The FIA intends to conduct a forensic analysis of electronic devices recovered from the suspects before proceeding with further questioning.
Despite repeated requests, the Sindh Police have yet to hand over Armaghan’s laptops, mobile phones, and other relevant case records to the FIA.
A five-member FIA team questioned the suspects at the Anti-Violent Crime Cell (AVCC) centre, where Shiraz revealed that Armaghan had always treated him as an inferior since childhood.
According to FIA sources, a letter was sent to the Sindh Inspector General on February 28 requesting access to digital devices, FIRs, and confiscated items. However, the agency has not yet received the requested evidence.
The FIA has also not been provided with the names of the officers involved in the raid that led to Armaghan’s arrest.
Meanwhile, progress on the forensic examination of advanced weapons seized from Armaghan’s residence has stalled due to a malfunction in the Sindh Police forensic department’s software system.
This technical failure has hindered a complete analysis of the firearms.
Despite the seriousness of the case, the Crime Investigation Agency (CIA) has shown little interest in conducting a thorough forensic review of the weapons.
So far, the CIA has only performed a limited analysis of shell casings recovered from the encounter with Armaghan.
According to forensic department sources, the CIA recovered 24 shell casings from the crime scene, confirming that Armaghan used multiple firearms during the police encounter.
It is worth noting that in the Mustafa Amir abduction and murder case, police had submitted a report to the court detailing Armaghan’s arrest and the recovery of weapons.
The report revealed that during the police raid, the suspect opened fire using modern weapons.
The report further stated that the police raided Armaghan’s residence to recover Mustafa Amir.
When officers arrived at the suspect’s bungalow, he refused to open the door. The gate was forcibly opened using a police vehicle, after which officers entered.
As police moved inside, gunfire erupted from the upper floor with the intent to kill.
The shooting injured DSP Ahsan Zulfiqar and Constable Iqbal.
The Mustafa murder case is one of the top stories on news channels nowadays. It is a case of the kidnapping and killing of a 23-year-old Karachi resident.
One has to be careful while reporting such news as the choice of words, style of presentation, and thumbnails on YouTube videos often build opinions even before the court announces its judgement in the case. So, in this case, it is of great importance to gather all the available information with background and listen to all versions of the story to report it.
The following text is sourced from the police investigation and interrogation reports, court decisions, and people related to the Mustafa murder case.
Mustafa Amir, a DHA resident, was allegedly abducted on January 6, but the case made headlines when the Sindh policemen addressed a press conference next month. Six days later, the Balochistan Police recovered a charred body in a torched car and handed over it to the Edhi Foundation.
In a media talk on February 14, police claimed that his friends killed the kidnapped youth. They allegedly stuffed the body in the trunk of his car and torched it in Balochistan’s Dureji area. Police also claimed to have arrested the prime suspect’s friend, Sheraz aka Shavez Bukhari. It was Sheraz who disclosed the information during the investigation.
The prime suspect Armaghan was arrested during a raid bungalow in DHA following a ransom call to the family. Suspects allegedly demanded Rs20 million from the victim’s family. Sources within the police say the gun battle with the suspect continued for four hours.
They took laptops from the house and blood samples were found on a carpet in a room. As the case unfolded, investigators claimed that the conflict between the two started because of a woman. The victim’s mother also accused the same girl of killing her son in a video statement. She claimed that the woman fled to the United States after the incident.
On February 15, an anti-terrorism court in Karachi sent Shiraz to police custody on physical remand till February 21. Police failed to get physical remand of the prime suspect, drawing officials’ ire. A legal expert clarified that the criticism against the court for not granting a physical remand was not appropriate as the police did not seek a physical remand in the first information report related to the case.
He told Aaj News’ programme Dus that the case would come under the jurisdiction of the ATC after the addition of Section 7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act (punishment for acts of terrorism) to the FIR.
On the same day, three police officers were suspended from their duty for their apparent negligence in the case.
The prime suspect was a “habitual offender,” police records showed. Complaints against him alleged that he was involved in extortion, kidnapping, drug dealing, and illegal possession of weapons.
When an Aaj News correspondent visited the suspect’s house, he saw that there was a high-tech facility in the house which was apparently used as a “software house.” Moreover, Kamran Qureshi, the suspect’s father, defended his son’s gun battle with the police and denied accusations. He accused the victim of selling drugs to his son and blamed a “police officer” for the “entire conspiracy.”
On February 17, a judicial magistrate approved a request for the exhumation of Mustafa’s body. Later, a three-member medical panel was formed by the judicial magistrate (West).
The next day, an ATC in Karachi sent the prime suspect to police custody on a four-day remand and sought a medical report.
An interrogation report claimed that the victim and the prime suspect were childhood friends. It was a reiteration of the account Shiraz told to police about the incident.
On February 20, Armaghan allegedly confessed to killing the victim as the chilling details of the report claimed that he offered the victim a “chance to escape before setting him on fire.” The charred vehicle in which Mustafa was allegedly burnt to death was present in Balochistan’s Durerji, Aaj News saw.
When Qureshi appeared on Imran Sultan’s show Dus, he claimed to have substantial evidence and advised to close the case or else “big names” would come to the limelight.
“I want to be the chief investigation officer of my child. I have plenty of evidence. I am a law graduate and hold a firearm licence,” he said while appearing on the show on February 21, 2025.
On February 22, an ATC extended the physical remand of suspects Armaghan and Sheraz by five days. The investigating officer claimed that two blood samples from the suspect’s house were collected and one of the blood samples was linked to a girl identified as ***a. He also informed the court about the money laundering allegations against the suspect
Furthermore, four persons, including a TV actor’s son, were arrested on Saturday. One of the suspects claimed to have sold drugs to Mustafa, according to sources within police.
Sources within the police said [initial DNA testing of the samples][21] taken from the body “confirmed that the person burned alive in Balochistan’s Dureji was indeed Mustafa Amir.”
Shiraz, was presented before the court to record his confessional statement under Section 164 on March 2 and investigators have also uncovered that the accused is linked to 11 other criminal cases.