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Range Rover stolen in UK turns up three years later in Pakistan

Black Range Rover Sport stolen from Harrogate in 2022 signalled its location in Karachi three years later

Shweta Sharma
Tuesday 07 October 2025 08:48 BST
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Related: Moment two-year-old boy in car stolen at petrol station is found by police

Interpol has requested help from Pakistan’s police after a Range Rover Sport car stolen from the UK in 2022 was traced to a port in Karachi.

The black Range Rover Sport, originally registered as MK70 OKW, was stolen from Harrogate in North Yorkshire in November 2022.

The onboard telematics system of the SUV signalled its location at the Saddar area of Karachi in February, more than 6,800km from its original owner in the UK, according to a report in The Times.

Pakistan’s National Central Bureau of Interpol said UK authorities have asked the local police for assistance in tracing and locating the vehicle stolen from the northern English town.

“We received a letter from Interpol ... requesting assistance in recovering a vehicle stolen from the UK,” a senior Karachi police officer, Amjad Ahmed Shaikh, who heads the anti-car lifting cell of Karachi police, said, according to Arab News.

“Since the location they provided for this vehicle, stolen in 2022, was from February, we have emailed them to request the current location,” he added.

“Once we receive the updated location, action will be initiated and the vehicle will be recovered.”

The original owner of the vehicle remains unknown, while the Range Rover remained listed as stolen in the global Interpol database.

Pakistan’s Interpol received a request from their colleagues in Manchester late last month after the tracker signalled its location in Pakistan.

It is not the first time a luxury car stolen in the UK has been found in Pakistan.

In 2022, a Bentley Mulsanne, worth about £200,000, stolen from London, was traced in Karachi. British intelligence passed a tip to Pakistani authorities, which led to a raid on a house in a posh Karachi area. The car was found parked in a driveway, covered with a cloth. The car had Pakistani registration plates, some of which were forged and handmade. But the chassis number matched the stolen car’s records.

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