Swiss woman kidnapping in Lahore: Calls grow for probe free of Ishaq Dar kin influence
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Demands for an independent and transparent investigation into the kidnapping of Swiss national Sofia Maria Miller in Lahore, Pakistan are intensifying, with allegations surfacing that a relative of Pakistani Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar may be connected to the incident. The case has drawn sharp international scrutiny, with commentators warning that political influence must not be allowed to shield any individual from accountability.
What Happened to Sofia Maria Miller
According to reports, Sofia Maria Miller arrived in Lahore from the United States aboard a Turkish Airlines flight. Concerns over her whereabouts emerged shortly after she reached Lahore Airport. Her Nepali husband subsequently filed a complaint, prompting the Sarwar Road Police to register a kidnapping case and launch an investigation. She was recovered by local police last month, according to reports.
What Investigators Have Said So Far
A spokesperson for the DIG (Operations) stated that preliminary investigations suggest Miller may have fallen victim to fraudulent tour operators. Police have reportedly widened the scope of the inquiry to establish all facts and circumstances surrounding the incident, according to leading Pakistani daily The News International, which reported on the case on 2 June.
Calls for Accountability Amid Allegations of Influence
The case has attracted commentary from US Army veteran and human rights activist Mansoor Hussain Laghari, who wrote in The Times of Israel that he was born in Pakistan's Sindh and is acutely aware of a system where, in his words, 'power, politics, and connections have too often influenced justice.'
'My own family experienced the consequences of standing against injustice. My father spent his life defending minorities, peasants, and the voiceless — and paid a heavy price. The world has seen these failures before,' Laghari wrote.
He added: 'Justice cannot depend on political pressure. Justice cannot depend on who your father or grandfather is. Justice cannot depend on whether a case receives international attention.'
The Daniel Pearl Shadow
Laghari's commentary also invoked the 2002 kidnapping and killing of American journalist Daniel Pearl in Pakistan. He noted that Pakistan's Supreme Court later ordered the release of men convicted in Pearl's kidnapping and murder — including Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh — two decades after the crime. 'To many around the world, it was a devastating message: even one of the most internationally recognised terrorism cases could end without the accountability many expected. That destroyed trust,' Laghari wrote.
What Comes Next
The allegations linking a relative of Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar to the incident have not been officially confirmed or denied by Pakistani authorities, according to available reports. International observers and rights activists are pressing Islamabad for a probe conducted without political interference. How Pakistani law enforcement and the government respond will be closely watched, particularly given the country's fraught record on high-profile cases involving foreign nationals.