10 August 2015 | 11:13

Pakistan province orders probe into huge child abuse scandal

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A Pakistani province on Sunday announced a judicial inquiry into a massive child abuse and extortion scandal allegedly involving hundreds of victims amid mounting calls for justice, AFP reports.


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A Pakistani province on Sunday announced a judicial inquiry into a massive child abuse and extortion scandal allegedly involving hundreds of victims amid mounting calls for justice, AFP reports.

At least 280 children were filmed being sexually abused by a gang of 25 men who blackmailed their parents by threatening to leak the videos, Latif Ahmed Sara, a representative for the victims' families, said.

Children aged mostly under 14 were also forced to perform sex acts on each other in the more than 400 videos made in Hussain Khanwala village, southwest of Lahore, since 2007, Sara and local media reports said.

"Around 300 videos of the kids have been leaked and every second child in this village is a victim," Sara, a legal activist said.

Chief Minister of Punjab Shahbaz Sharif on Sunday ordered an independent judicial probe into the case, amid mounting anger from rights activists and a flurry of media attention. 

"The chief minister (of) Punjab has ordered a judicial inquiry into (the) incident, those involved in the case will be punished and the affected families will be provided with justice at any cost," the statement from the chief minister's office said.

Saba Sadiq, chief of the province's Child Protection Bureau, described the case as "the largest child abuse scandal in Pakistan's history".

In an initial report ordered by the Punjab provincial government last week and carried out by police, local authorities described the allegations as "baseless". 

It was rejected by media and rights activists who said the officials carrying out the inquiry were biased. 

It came after parents of the victims clashed with police in the town of Kasur near Lahore as they staged a protest blasting authorities for failing to prosecute the criminals.

Over 20 people were injured in the clashes Tuesday when police used force to disperse more than 400 protesters.

    Extortion 

The gang allegedly attempted to extort money from parents of victims, selling clips of the videos locally for 40 Pakistan rupees each (39 US cents) if they did not pay up. 

"They made the video of my son in 2011 and we have been paying the blackmailers since then," the mother of one of the victims, who did not want to be named, told an AFP reporter.

"I have seen the videos, they are disgusting," she said.

Another woman said she came to know about her son's abuse last month when a video of him was leaked. 

"He was terrified, he had been subjected to sexual abuse for the past two years, today we went to the police station to file a report," the distraught mother told AFP.

"Every child in the village has seen the videos, they (the accused) had been extorting money from parents, threatening to leak the video otherwise," she said.

An AFP reporter who visited the village said young children had clips of the abuse on their mobile phones which they offered to show journalists for free.

Local police reject the allegations of abuse.

"This is a very old incident and those posing as victims are cashing in on the issue to settle a land dispute," Shahzad Sultan, the area's police chief told AFP.

"We made announcements through mosques when we came to know about the incident and arrested eight people. The incidents stopped there." 

He said a group of young boys in their early 20s was making videos of "consensual" sexual acts for fun.

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