The Supreme Court of Pakistan has once again closed the door on one of the country’s most widely followed criminal cases, rejecting Zahir Jaffer’s review petition and upholding his death sentence in the brutal murder of Noor Mukadam. With this ruling, the court has reaffirmed its earlier decision, leaving only limited constitutional options such as a presidential pardon.

Noor Mukadam’s name first became national news in July 2021, when the 27-year-old daughter of a former diplomat was found murdered at a residence in Islamabad’s upscale F-7 area. The investigation that followed revealed a deeply disturbing crime that included torture and beheading. Zahir Jaffer was arrested from the crime scene itself, and the case quickly moved into Pakistan’s legal system, triggering widespread public outrage and renewed debate around violence against women and accountability for privileged offenders.
The trial court in 2022 sentenced Jaffer to death for murder along with additional imprisonment on other charges. The Islamabad High Court later upheld the conviction in 2023 and even strengthened parts of the sentence. In 2025, the Supreme Court had already upheld the core death sentence in its previous judgment, confirming his conviction after detailed hearings. Today’s review petition was essentially his last major legal attempt to challenge that decision.
During the review proceedings, Jaffer’s legal team had argued around issues such as mental health and the validity of evidence, but the bench remained unconvinced. The court maintained that the case had already been examined through multiple judicial layers, from trial court to high court to the Supreme Court, with consistent findings across all forums.
With today’s ruling, the Supreme Court has not only dismissed the review plea but also refused the request for a medical board to reassess his mental condition. The judgment reinforces the earlier position that the evidence and legal arguments had already been fully addressed in prior hearings.
This case has moved through almost every stage of Pakistan’s judicial system over the past few years, with each level of court upholding accountability in a case that shocked the country. From the trial court verdict in 2022 to the High Court ruling in 2023 and Supreme Court confirmation in 2025, the outcome has remained consistent.
For Noor Mukadam’s family, today’s decision on Zahir Jaffer’s plea is another legal validation of the verdict they have been fighting for since 2021. For the wider public, the case continues to stand as one of the most high-profile examples of Pakistan’s criminal justice system dealing with gender-based violence and elite privilege.
While the legal process of Noor Mukadam and Zahir Jaffer case now appears to be reaching its final stages, the only remaining possibility for the convict lies outside the judiciary, through a presidential pardon under Article 45 of the Constitution.
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Sources: Dawn, Arab News, Business Recorder