
Islamabad Police say killer of Pakistani TikTok star Sana Yousaf arrested
ISLAMABAD: Pakistani police said on Tuesday it had arrested the main suspect in the murder of 17-year-old TikTok star Sana Yousaf, disclosing that he had killed her after she repeatedly rejected his proposals for 'friendship.'
Yousaf, who had over 830,000 followers and 29 million likes on video sharing platform TikTok, was shot dead at her house in Islamabad's G-13 area on Monday. Police launched a probe on Monday, saying that unidentified persons shot Yousaf in the chest twice and killed her on the spot. Her body was shifted to the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) hospital in Islamabad for post-mortem.
A CCTV footage, which was first shared on private news channels and then later on state-run Pakistan Television (PTV), showed a young man walking briskly away from Yousaf's house in broad daylight. Sharing details of the suspect, Islamabad Inspector General of Police Syed Ali Nasir Rizvi said the suspect is a matriculation student and the son of a retired government officer who was arrested from Faisalabad.
The police official said the suspect did not have any source of income, adding that he used to promote content on Instagram and other social media platforms.
'Before getting into the motive, I should make it clear that we have arrested [the suspect] and recovered the weapon of offense,' Rizvi told reporters at a news conference.
He said police also recovered Yousaf's iPhone from the suspect, which he had taken with him to erase evidence of the crime.
'Basically, it was a case of repeated rejections,' Rizvi said, adding that the suspect had been trying to contact Yousaf through social media in the past, who had been rejecting his offers of 'friendship.'
He said the suspect had tried to contact Yousaf for eight to nine hours at her Islamabad residence on May 29, the day of her birthday, but could not succeed. Rizvi said the suspect tried to meet Sana again on June 2 at her residence, waiting there for eight to 10 hours but failed again.
'And then he planned and entered her house because of his weapon and murdered her,' the Islamabad Police official said.
Rizvi described it as a 'blind murder,' saying that it was a challenging case for police to solve as the suspect had taken her mobile phone and left no evidence of the crime. He credited Islamabad Police officials for solving the murder within 20 hours through the use of cellular technology and digital surveillance.
Pakistani news outlets frequently report cases of violence against women, particularly for turning down marriage proposals or for uploading videos on TikTok and other social media platforms.
Police in Pakistan's southwestern province in January arrested a man for being involved in murdering his 14-year-old daughter, an American citizen, for posting 'objectionable' videos on TikTok.
More than 54 million people use TikTok in conservative Pakistan, where authorities have repeatedly blocked the app over concerns regarding its content. It was banned four times in 2021.
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