[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text dp_text_size=”size-4″]The ‘Mera Pyara’ function of the Punjab Police App was instrumental in reuniting a missing girl with her family after a 12-year absence. Saba Khalil, discovered by a Child Protection Bureau team in 2011 near the Minar-e-Pakistan police station, was unable to disclose her address at the time.
Mustansar Feroze, Lahore’s Chief Traffic Officer (CTO), led a volunteer team to reunite lost children and the elderly with their families. The squad, led by Constable Samina Latif, began piecing together Saba Khalil’s account.
The team was able to learn important details about the girl’s past through continuous follow-up sessions and in-depth interviews. They discovered that she was from the Minar-e-Pakistan area and that her father used to operate a cart.
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The team scoured the region for Saba Khalil’s residence with the help of locals and Faqir Hussain, the owner of a local hotel. Their efforts were rewarded when they discovered her long-lost house.
Everyone was pleased at the emotional reunion between the girl’s father and his daughter after more than a decade of separation. Dr. Usman Anwar, Inspector General of Police in Punjab, thanked CTO Mustansar Feroze and Captain (retd.) Mustansar Feroze for their contributions to this uplifting success.
Dr. Usman Anwar asked the public to use the Punjab Police Pakistan app to look for and record missing people, especially those with special needs, in the Mera Pyara database. This powerful technology bridges the gap between the public and law enforcement, allowing missing people to be reunited with their families.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]