
The Sustainable Social Development Organisation (SSDO) has released its latest report, 'Mapping Violence Against Children in Islamabad 2024', which exposes alarming figures and systemic gaps in the criminal justice process for offences against children.
The report, based on data obtained through the Right to Information (RTI) law from Islamabad Police, examines eight categories of offences child trafficking, child marriage, child labour, physical abuse, sexual abuse, kidnapping/abduction, murder/homicide and child pornography.
According to the findings, kidnapping was the most reported crime in 2024 with 68 cases, followed by 48 cases of sexual abuse. While police submitted 10 challans in kidnapping cases and 44 in sexual abuse cases, convictions remain rare. The majority of cases are still under trial or under investigation.
Similar patterns emerged across other indicators, 14 cases of physical abuse, six of child marriage, and two each of child trafficking, murder/homicide and child pornography where legal proceedings have yet to conclude in most instances. A notable number of cases were also withdrawn, pointing to persistent gaps in investigation quality, evidence collection and victim/witness protection.
SSDO Executive Director Syed Kausar Abbas said the low rate of convictions despite multiple challans underscores the deep challenges in delivering justice. "Without urgent reforms in investigation, prosecution and victim support, crimes against children will continue without accountability," he said.
The report recommends establishing specialised investigation units, fast-track courts and comprehensive victim and witness protection programmes to strengthen justice delivery and improve outcomes for child victims.
COMMENTS
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ