Eshal Fatima, 17 years old and a first-year college student’s house in Sultan Colony, Satellite Town, Jhang, Punjab.
According to her family, she was a “good student” and there had been no prior incidents of dispute or violence. Her tragic death has sparked a huge amount of public anger all over the country and an urgent national discussion about women’s safety and the need to hold police accountable.
What Happened: A Timeline of Events
June 4, 2026: Eshal left her home in Jhang. According to the FIR lodged by her father, she left after being contacted through a neighbour and told she would be taken to collect clothes. The family says she was later picked up by the younger brother of a friend on an electric scooter. When she did not return, her family tried reaching her on her mobile phone, which was switched off. The family initially did not file a police report, believing she may have been staying with a friend.
June 7, 2026: A private hospital in Jhang contacted Satellite Town police to report that several unidentified young men had dropped off a semi-conscious teenage girl before fleeing the scene. Neither the hospital nor police could initially identify her. She was transferred to District Headquarters (DHQ) Hospital Jhang, where emergency treatment began at approximately 11:30 a.m. Her family was separately informed of her condition through an anonymous phone call directing them to the hospital. Despite medical intervention, Eshal’s condition rapidly deteriorated, and she died at DHQ Hospital.
Case at a Glance
- Victim: Eshal Fatima, 17, first-year college student, Jhang
- Went missing: June 4, 2026 from Sultan Colony, Satellite Town, Jhang
- Found unconscious: June 7, 2026 at a private hospital, Jhang
- Died: June 7, 2026 at DHQ Hospital Jhang
- Suspects arrested: 3 (Khalil-ur-Rehman, Muhammad Hassan, Umais) + 1 female facilitator
- FIR registered at: Satellite Town Police Station, Jhang
- Post-mortem result: No evidence of sexual assault or torture (preliminary)
- Suspected cause of death: Toxic or intoxicating substance (preliminary; final report pending)
- Forensic samples sent to: Punjab Forensic Science Agency (PFSA), Lahore
Arrests and Investigation
Jhang police, under the direction of DPO Jhang Sajid Hussain, have made significant progress in a short timeframe. The main accused, Khalil-ur-Rehman, was the first to be taken into custody. Police subsequently arrested two more suspects — Muhammad Hassan and Umais — who had fled to Lahore and were traced using CCTV footage and digital evidence. A female facilitator connected to the case has also been detained.
Police have recovered the vehicle allegedly used in the incident from Jhang. An FIR covering abduction-related charges has been registered at Satellite Town Police Station, with more serious charges — including murder provisions — reportedly being added as the investigation progresses.
Investigators have noted that initial findings suggest the victim and the main accused were known to each other prior to the incident.
Post-Mortem Report: What It Says and What It Doesn’t
A preliminary post-mortem examination conducted at DHQ Hospital Jhang found no evidence of gang rape, sexual assault, or physical torture. This is a significant development given that the gang rape narrative had spread rapidly on social media and in initial news reports.
The report instead points to the preliminary possibility that her death was caused by the consumption of a toxic or intoxicating substance — either poisoning or drug intoxication. However, this too remains unconfirmed at the preliminary stage.
To establish the definitive cause of death, essential biological and physical samples have been dispatched to the Punjab Forensic Science Agency (PFSA) in Lahore. The final forensic report, which will carry legal and evidentiary weight in the case, has not yet been released.
Public Reaction and National Response
The case has prompted widespread public grief and anger across Pakistan. Several prominent Pakistani celebrities and public figures — including Hadiqa Kiani, Sabeena Farooq, Momina Iqbal, and Mishi Khan — have publicly demanded justice and called for stronger protections for women. The case has trended on Pakistani social media platforms and drawn sustained coverage from national news outlets.
Activists and citizens have noted that the real measure of the system will be in ensuring a transparent investigation and a fair, accountable legal process — not only in making arrests.
Several key questions remain open pending the PFSA forensic report: the confirmed cause of death, whether any criminal offence under assault provisions can be legally established, and the full scope of the suspects’ roles and accountability. The investigation is ongoing.