Umar Farooq Zahoor (; born 1975) is a Norwegian-born Pakistani businessman based in Dubai. In 2003, the Oslo District Court convicted him of gross embezzlement; the sentence was never served. Norwegian authorities have sought him since 2010 in connection with alleged involvement in the Nordea bank fraud, a charge he has consistently denied.
Zahoor was previously affiliated with Ameri Group, where he served was CEO until August 2015.
Umar Farooq Zahoor was born in 1975 in Norway to Pakistani parents who were originally from Sialkot. In the 2014 book by and titled The Coup: On the Inside of Norway's Most Powerful Mafia Family, the Zahoor family is described as one of the largest crime family of Norway. He initially studied in Norway before moving to the Middle East.
In 2000, Norwegian authorities alleged that Zahoor had misappropriated airline tickets worth over 15 million NOK through a travel agency he operated.
In 2003, Zahoor and New Zealand national Shaun Gregory Morgan established a financial company called Banque Internationale Ltd. in Zürich, Switzerland. Swiss authorities later alleged that the entity was used to defraud investors. Morgan was convicted and sentenced to five years in prison after several victims came forward. Zahoor was convicted in absentia by the Oslo District Court of gross embezzlement and sentenced to one year in prison; the sentence was never served, and he was subsequently placed on an Interpol Red Notice.
In 2004, Zahoor was arrested in Pakistan and, according to him, tortured by the Pakistani police. The arrest was based on a report staged by Imtiaz Ahmed Sheikh, a Turkish businessman and politician who was indicted the following year for extensive corruption.
In 2010, Usman Zahoor, Zahoor's brother, and four fellow runners defrauded Randi Nilsen, Gunnar Block Watne's widow, of more than NOK 63 million. The police state that Usman Farooq Zahoor was the mastermind behind a fraud of more than NOK 111 million. The money was transferred using a false power of attorney through Nordea's branch at Tveita in Oslo and ended up in Dubai, where it is believed to be controlled by Umar Zahoor. Zahoor himself claims that he does not control this money. In the same year, he lent five million NOK to the wind power company NBT AS. In September 2011, these five individuals were sentenced in the Oslo District Court, and Usman Zahoor received the most severe sentence of ten years' imprisonment. When the appeal case came up before the Borgarting Court of Appeal, he pleaded guilty to gross fraud. The Court of Appeal found Usman Farooq Zahoor guilty of gross fraud but acquitted him and some of the co-accused of having acted as an organized criminal group. The court set the sentence for Usman Zahoor at five years and nine months in prison. Later, the Supreme Court of Norway also issued Zahoor's arrest warrants in connection with one of Norway's biggest bank fraud cases, which involved money laundering.
In November 2022, Zahoor revealed that the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) government had sold a Graff wristwatch, gifted to former prime minister of Pakistan Imran Khan by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, for US$2 million. Khan later also acknowledged selling some gifts, including this watch, during his tenure as prime minister. Imran Khan said he will approach international courts against Umar Zahoor, Jang Group over gift sale allegation.
Zahoor's investments span real estate, IT, energy projects, agriculture, and more across the United Arab Emirates and other countries. He maintained close ties with various royal family members in the Middle East and collaborates with several heads of state in Africa, Southeast Asia, the Caribbean, and South America.
In August 2023, Zahoor received a medal by President of Equatorial Guinea Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.
In August 2024, it was reported that President Asif Zardari approved the Hilal-e-Imtiaz award for Zahoor for his role in the Toshakhana reference case against Imran Khan.
In 2006, he married Pakistani actress Sofia Mirza, and had twin daughters with her. When the marriage was dissolved in 2009, the mother was granted custody of the twins, and for fear that Zahoor would take the daughters out of Pakistan, the children were put on a no-fly list to prevent them from leaving the country. In the same year, he kidnapped the daughters and smuggled them out of Pakistan using fake passports. In 2013, it was announced that Zahoor had become engaged to Pakistani actress Veena Malik. The following year, Malik was sentenced to 26 years in prison for blasphemy, but had already escaped to Dubai by then.