Dua, Nimra, Dinar: Sindh Police suspect ‘human trafficking racket’ behind love marriages
Sindh Police investigators are trying to establish the suspected involvement of human trafficking racket in the Dua Zehra, Nimra Kazmi and Dinar cases.
KARACHI: The investigation into the disappearance and reappearance of Karachi girls including Dua Zehra, Nimra Kazmi and Dinar after love marriages have been continued by the police authorities while the Sindh Police investigators were trying to establish the suspected involvement of human trafficking racket.
Sindh Police officials concerned with the probe told News360 that more revelations are likely to come forth in the investigation into the three girls from Karachi who fled from their homes after befriending boys on the PUBG gaming app to marry them in Punjab.
Police sources told News360 that they suspect that Dua, Nimra and Dinar were trapped by a human trafficking racket that used to lure girls through young boys on social media platforms and now the gaming apps to motivate them to leave their homes for love marriages.
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“Innocent girls decide to leave their families for the love marriages without thinking about the risks. In such incidents, the young boys later vanished from the scene and the innocent girls are sent to the brothels.”
Sindh Police investigators expressed suspicions in the recent three cases, especially in the Dua Zehra case. Sources revealed that Dua Zehra reached Zaheer Ahmed’s house in Lahore but their marriage ceremony was organised in Okara’s Haveli Lakha and later they have been recovered from a landlord’s house in Pakpattan.
It was told that the landlord was his paternal uncle of Zaheer. Police investigators also revealed that they did not find any traces of Zaheer’s parents so far which made the case more suspicious. Sindh police officials have also shown reservations over the role of the Lahore police department as they did nothing to recover Dua Zehra despite being provided with nikahnama of Dua Zehra by the Karachi police department.
Dua, Nimra, Dinar’s disppearance cases expose dysfunctional family relationships
Dua Zehra was later recovered by Okara police officials.
The back-to-back incidents of young girls fleeing from their homes have also exposed the dysfunctional family relationships in Pakistan, whereas, an alleged online gaming app, PUBG, turned out to be a crucial part of connecting the girls with others.