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The Afghan woman immortalised on a National Geographic magazine cover is to be freed on bail days after being arrested in Pakistan for possessing fraud documents, a government minister said on Sunday.
The haunting image of Sharbat Gula, taken in a Pakistan refugee camp by photographer Steve McCurry in the 1980s, became one of the most famous cover images in the magazine's history.
"I think I will have to review this case because she is a woman and we should see it from a humanitarian angle," Pakistan Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said at a press conference today.
"As a first step, the FIA should arrange her bail as soon as possible so that she should get out of jail," Khan added.
Investigators, who have uncovered thousands of fraud cases over the last decade, launched a probe into her application shortly after she had procured the identity card.
Officials say, she had applied for a Pakistani identity card in Peshawar in April 2014, using the name Sharbat Bibi.
The photo attached to her application featured the same piercing green eyes seen in McCurry's famous image, only older.
Officials say the National Database Registration Authority (NADRA) has so far re-verified 91 million ID cards and detected 60,675 fraudulent cards.
Pakistan has for decades provided safe haven for millions of Afghans, who fled their country after the Soviet invasion of 1979.
The country hosts 1.4 million registered Afghan refugees, according to UNHCR, making it the third-largest refugee-hosting nation in the world.
The agency also estimates a further one million unregistered refugees are in the country.
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