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Celebrities step in to lay Humaira Asghar Ali to rest after her family ‘refuses to claim her body’

Celebrities step in to lay Humaira Asghar Ali to rest after her family ‘refuses to claim her body’

While actors like Sonya Hussyn and Yashma Gill have offered to arrange her burial, others have reflected on the isolation she may have faced.
10 Jul, 2025

Actor and model Humaira Asghar Ali, whose decomposed body was found in a Karachi apartment on Tuesday nearly a month after her passing when the police were executing a court-ordered eviction, stirred a wave of grief and introspection in the entertainment industry.

What made matters worse were reports suggesting her family had refused to claim her body, prompting several actors to volunteer to take responsibility for her final rites.

While some have offered to ensure she is buried with dignity, others have shared emotional reflections about the isolation she may have faced and the state of a society that allowed her to die unnoticed.

The Actors Collective (ACT) of Pakistan — a trade body representing actors in the country — has announced that it will ensure she is “laid to rest with the dignity and respect every human being deserves.”

“In our family, no one is forgotten. No member is left behind. We stand together — in life, in loss, and in remembrance,” the organisation wrote in a statement on Wednesday.

Actor Sonya Hussyn was among the first to publicly offer to carry out the final rites if no relative came forward. “I request the authorities to wait until tomorrow. If no one shows up, I would like to take on the duty of performing the final rites,” she wrote on Instagram.

Yasir Hussain supported her call, stating, “The industry that caused the deceased’s family to disown her, that same industry is here for her.”

Yashma Gill said she reached out to law enforcement to explore the legal process around claiming Ali’s body. “If we failed her in life, let us not fail her in death,” she wrote. Gill added that a few of Ali’s relatives may now come forward to take responsibility for the burial. Still, if they don’t, the police have agreed to involve those willing to help from the industry.

Other celebrities used the moment to reflect on the deeper implications of Ali’s death, on isolation, estrangement, and how quickly people in the public eye can be forgotten.

“It’s a collective pain for every woman out there trying to pursue her passion,” wrote Hajra Yamin. “I can’t stop thinking about what she must’ve been going through, the fear, the silence, the emotional and even physical isolation. She must’ve had big dreams. And she was brave enough to step out and follow them. What breaks my heart is that she was far too young to leave this world with her dreams still unfulfilled.”

Actor Mariyam Nafees expressed disbelief over the delay in discovering Ali’s death. “Six months?! Been off the grid for six months and nobody knew?!” she wrote, referencing speculation that she may have died six months earlier. The medico-legal reports have not yet confirmed Ali’s time of death or the cause.

“The family refusing to claim her body is a new low. People disrespecting her by sharing dead body’s pictures and videos for ‘content’? Another damn low,” she added, criticising Ali’s family and those sharing disturbing images and videos of the deceased.

Zarnish Khan urged people not to circulate graphic imagery or indulge in speculation, and instead pray for the deceased.

Actor Anmol Baloch shared a sharply worded message, calling Ali’s death a mirror held up to society. “She died alone. Her body lay in that flat for a whole month. No one noticed. No one came. No one cared enough to check… We are failing — as friends, as family, as a society.”

The 32-year-old actor and model, and former Tamasha Ghar contestant, was found dead in her Defence Housing Authority flat, possibly weeks after her passing, with no one having sounded the alarm.

According to South DIG Syed Asad Raza, the body was discovered when police were executing a court order to evict occupants from the Ittehad Commercial Phase-VI apartment on Tuesday. With no response at the door, officers broke the lock and entered, only to find Ali’s body inside. The police believe she had been dead for up to two weeks.

Dr Summaiya Syed, police surgeon at Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre, confirmed the body was in an “advanced stage of decomposition.” A postmortem has been conducted, but the cause of death is currently reserved.

Ali had stopped paying rent last year, prompting the landlord to seek eviction through the court. According to South SSP Mahzoor Ali, initial findings suggest there was no foulplay: the apartment door was locked from the inside, including the balcony.

Comments

(Hum Jeet Gaye)*2 Jul 10, 2025 01:16pm
Why/ How did she die?? RIP young soul
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Laila Jul 10, 2025 01:18pm
She was female. A daughter. So her family disowned her. Had she been a son, her family would have accepted it even proudly bragged about it. Such is the brutal reality of the one sided patriarchal honor culture. You dont turn your backs on your children. Your door must stay open for whenever they need you. According to Yasir, the industry her family disowned her for, is here for her. Yes now when she is dead. Where was this fraternity and the many colleagues and people she crossed path with when she was alive? Shame on her family. Your children are your children. You don't cut ties with your kin, Your daughters and sisters. It breaks my heart she had no one. No one. Imagine that.
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Jamil Awan Jul 10, 2025 01:25pm
What a country we are! A family that doesn't accept an artist as a family member? Where is this country going? The art fraternity is moving forward, and this is a good thing. It is also a reminder that egoism can leave anyone in the same condition. The response is only one: solidarity with any artist in difficult conditions. The huge question that arises is why this young artist remained alone in this huge artistic community. Why?
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D.M NAPAR Jul 10, 2025 01:44pm
Please join me in praying for the departed soul to rest in eternal peace.
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Mahmood Jul 10, 2025 01:53pm
@LAILA, You seem to be obsessed with "men vs. women" and our "patriarchal honor culture". Go out once in a while and breath some fresh air. In my lifetime of traveling around the world, having lived in 5 countries over 50 years, I've come across many families, including Christians, Atheists, Jewish and Russian Orthodox culture and faith, where parents stopped talking to their daughter or son, when the youngsters had gone against the parent's wishes, or had otherwise displeased their elders. So this story is nothing unique about "patriarchal honor culture" of South Asia, Pakistan or India or Muslims. Stop your feminism and diatribe how women are badly treated in ''our culture" if you have no clue of how other cultures treat their children in similar cases.
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zain Jul 10, 2025 01:57pm
"Ali had stopped paying rent last year" Who will volunteer for "the due rent" for almost 6 months.
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Tahir Raouf Jul 10, 2025 02:07pm
To put such comments for your satisfaction is easy, have you consulted her family about the situation??
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Falcon1 Jul 10, 2025 02:19pm
Oh dear lord! So many holier than thou commentators, who are ready to condemn the family of the deceased - without having a clue into the circumstances of the case, or having walked a mile in the shoes of either. How do these people know that the family in fact had not tried to locate her, but she refused to acknowledge them?? Or she secluded herself or had blocked the phone numbers of her own family or so-called "friends"? Or what caused her to live alone, or why none of her actor colleagues cared enough for her to reach out or visit her, or call for 2 weeks?? Please, never judge a person unless you be judged yourself. If the tables were turned, and she had been your child and had caused whatever reason for being disowned by her family, what would be your reaction?? Think before you write. But write NOT all that you think!
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Tahmad Jul 10, 2025 02:27pm
Thanks to all TV and films artists in Pakistan for their supports to this young artist who passed out in Karachi over a week ago. RIP.
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Laila Jul 10, 2025 03:01pm
@Falcon1 There are no holler than thou comments. How do we know her family cold heartedly, deliberately abandoned her and refused to have anything to do with her? Through the magic of sight and reading. The article above had links to the news articles on Dawn about Humaira and how her own father, the one who brought her into this world, has BLATANTLY REFUSED to accept her dead body or conduct her burial. There is no reason to disown a child. This is strictly prohibited in islam. We are not allowed to severe our ties with our family. No matter what. But this is Pakistan. Where a female life is worth nothing and where the double standards usually only cause for girls to be disowned. Rarely the boys. No matter what grave sin or serious crime they commit. The same privilege is not afforded girls. Instead of justifying her family's ignorant cultural based honor, ana, pride oriented decisions maybe people should show empathy for the victim. More information is coming to light as we speak. I suggest people read that. No person should be abandoned. We are not created to live in isolation without human contact. It is clear nobody checked up on her. But now everybody is coming out decrying this tragedy.
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Anonymous Jul 10, 2025 05:03pm
The Showbiz Community is buzzing now with endless comments, remorse, and reels on her tragic death and the so called 'the industry is here for her'. Where were they all when she was alive but haven't been seen in the showbiz circle?
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Falcon1 Jul 10, 2025 05:53pm
@LAILA. Oh yeah, Pakistan is such a horrible society for females, which oppresses her girls and women have no rights. So when are you packing up to emigrate to the Promised Land for most Pakistanis - Mississauga, or Brampton, ON, Canada?? You will be free, but freezing cold there!
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Surendra Sukhtankar Jul 10, 2025 05:58pm
So, sad! RIP.
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M. Saeed Jul 10, 2025 06:10pm
The poor girl was left to her own devices to live, when disowned by all her former loved ones. It appears that the postmortem report is deliberately being masked or withheld by the authorities, for some obscure reasons. Most probably, this is another form of Honor killing!
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MISS FOREVER Jul 10, 2025 06:12pm
Alas! A gem has lost and would be under tons of mud after some time. Disgusting, Greedy, Selfish, Self centered people were around her. Last call in October 2024 means no one cared about her, no one asked her needs, no one came to sort out the human who was in problem, who lived alone and faced tragic moments lastly. People need Fame but they deserve Shame..........
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Tanveer Jul 10, 2025 11:12pm
These artists are now trying to gain fame off her death—but where were they when she was alive, struggling both professionally and financially?
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Laila Jul 11, 2025 03:36am
@MAHMOOD And you seem obsessed with whataboutism and deflection from the very real issues surrounding females disproportionately so in Pakistan and the Subcontinent. So take your own advice and go out once in a while and breathe some fresh air. Go touch grass. I don't care what other cultures do or don't do. I care about what happens in Pakistan. Two wrongs don't make a right. No amount of your diatribe rooted in deflection, denial and whataboutism is going to change the fact that females ARE treated badly in our culture. Bitter truth. Yes this case has everything to do with our honor culture, patriarchy and societal double standards. Females are usually at the recieving end of ostracism, sexual violence, gender based violence, disowning and honor killing, males rarely. Stating facts is not feminism. Educate yourself on what feminism is before throwing it around that too as an insult. Do better. Had Humaira been a son, her family would not have disowned her. Yes our problems are unique to Pakistani/subcontinental patriarchal honor culture. If you don't like what I have to say, you can scroll on or not read it. I will comment, like it or not. Stop your misogyny and patriarchy when you clearly have no clue what happens in Pakistan.
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Laila Jul 11, 2025 01:21pm
@Falcon1 So your solution to a society being horrible to half its population is that I should migrate to Canada? Maybe you should rethink your approach amd educate yourself on this topic instead of just flat out denial. It seems you would like the horrible things to continue and we shouldn't even mention it. Very strange way of thinking on your part.
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