Presently, there is no team at any Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) office working full time to track down the suspects involved in selling or uploading pornographic material online.
"So far three cases of child pornography have been traced either on tip-offs from inside the country or outside of it. We do not have any other mechanism to track down the suspects involved in this heinous crime. The child pornography rings are operating here and to nab them we need a dedicated cell equipped with latest soft-wares," says FIA senior officer Usman Anwar.
"To deal with them we have proposed to the federal government that a 'cyber patrol wing', comprising a dedicated team of FIA personnel equipped with the latest software, be set up without any further delay. The FIA teams will do 24/7 patrolling on Internet to track down indigenous networks," he said.
Three cases involving child pornography have surfaced in Punjab province of Pakistan recently.
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Saadat Amin of Sargodha (some 200km from Lahore) allegedly made child pornography involving 25 children sold such material online.
Third suspect Nabil of Fateh Jang (some 300km from Lahore) allegedly made porn videos/pictures of some children.
In the first two cases, Norwegian and Canadian authorities alerted the FIA after they arrested members of the child pornography rings in their countries.
In the third case, the families of five children reported the matter to FIA.
There have been calls from all quarters to check child pornography after the brutal murder of a seven-year-old girl of Kasur that shocked the country.
The alleged killer is said to be the serial killer accused of killing at least eight minor girls.
According to the cybercrime law the Prevention of Electronic Crime Act - a child pornographer shall be punished with imprisonment for a term of up to seven years or with a fine of up to Rs 5 million or with both.