City
Epaper

J&K govt empowers SHOs to curb immoral trafficking

By IANS | Updated: February 5, 2025 19:50 IST

Jammu, Feb 5 The J&K government on Wednesday issued an order appointing station house officers (SHOs) of police ...

Open in App

Jammu, Feb 5 The J&K government on Wednesday issued an order appointing station house officers (SHOs) of police as special police officers, within their respective jurisdiction, under the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956.

An order issued by Principal Secretary, Home, Chandraker Bharti, under the ITPA, supersedes all previous notifications on the subject.

The order by the Lt Governor appoints all Station House Officers (SHOs) of J&K Police, not below the rank of Inspector, along with SDPOs/DySP Headquarters, as special police officers within their respective jurisdictions under the act with an aim to strengthen enforcement mechanisms against human trafficking and sexual exploitation for commercial purposes.

The Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act is a law designed to curb human trafficking and the organised commercial exploitation of individuals.

While the act does not criminalise prostitution per se, it penalises activities such as running brothels, inducing individuals into prostitution, detaining persons for such purposes, and exploiting minors.

Law enforcement agencies exercise powers vested in them under the ITPA to rescue victims and prosecute traffickers, pimps, and brothel operators.

A notorious sex racket jolted the society in Kashmir Valley in 2006. Nearly two dozen politicians and bureaucrats had been named for the exploitation of girls in a sex racket, run by a woman named Sabeena.

Described as the kingpin of the racket, Sabeeba had named politicians and bureaucrats in her recorded statement before the CBI. The CBI later arrested two senior politicians, a top-ranking IAS officer, a Deputy Inspector General of the BSF and a Superintendent of Police based on disclosures by a victim girl. Sabeena later claimed that she had been framed by some politicians and bureaucrats. During a protest on May 1, 2006, an angry mob brought down Sabeena’s house in Srinagar while venting their anger against the sex racket.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

AurangabadScour valve at Dhorkin damaged; pipeline testing delayed

NationalBattleground 2026: Women register higher turnout in first phase of polls in Assam, Kerala, Puducherry

AurangabadCity nullahs overflowing with garbage, millions of tonnes accumulated

PoliticsAssam, Puducherry record highest voting percentage of 85.38% and 89.83%; Kerala sees over 78% voter turnout

Other SportsLa Liga: 'Players want to give fans a win', says Arbeloa as he backs Real Madrid squad ahead of Girona clash

National Realted Stories

NationalEAM Jaishankar meets Mauritius PM Ramgoolam, highlights strong progress in bilateral ties

NationalJharkhand: NHRC takes suo motu cognisance in Ramgarh private steel plant explosion

NationalKarnataka by-elections: Polling ends peacefully, voter turnout crosses 68 per cent

NationalRBI moots one-hour lag in digital payments as safety step

NationalIndian Army strengthens Close Air Support with Prachand sortie, Apache firing