The Sunday Guardian

Prostituti­on gangs take to technology to lure customers

- DIBYENDU MONDAL NEW DELHI

Gangs involved in organised prostituti­on are luring customers through internet, text messages and mobilebase­d applicatio­ns, taking advantage of a loophole in the law which is silent on regulating the proliferat­ion, promotion and advertisem­ent of prostituti­on on digital platforms. This also means the “online onslaught” is increasing­ly rendering redundant Garstin Bastion Road (GB Road), Delhi’s famous red light zone.

This correspond­ent recently received a WhatsApp (a popular internet-based messenger applicatio­n) message from someone who claimed to have been providing “world class escort service with guaranteed customer satisfacti­on”. When contacted, the service provider gave an elaborate descriptio­n of the various services being provided, including “chatting with a girl”, “bold relations”, etc. The charges for such “services” range from Rs 1,000 to Rs 8,000 for a night.

Apart from this, there are several websites that func- tion under the name of either massage parlours or escort services, but a visit to these websites gives a completely different picture. Websites like nightan* els. com, exoticap* le.com, ka*al. co.in, among several others, openly list their various “explicit services” along with photograph­s of girls. When one of the websites was contacted, a person told this correspond­ent, “We have all sorts of girls, Indian, Nepali, Russian, models, airhostess­es—depending on your budget.” “We cannot tell you everything over phone, you will have to come to Nehru Place near Eros Hotel and you can choose whatever you like,” he added. The prices for the “services” range between Rs 8,000 and Rs 10,000 for two hours, to around Rs 30,000 for a night.

Several massage parlours and spa centres across the national capital also claim to provide “extra services” with “happy endings” after their massages for an extra payment. The deal will be struck directly with the masseur. Massage parlours are advertised widely through text messages, WhatsApp groups, web- sites, emails and mobile applicatio­ns. Several mobile applicatio­ns on Android and iOS (mobile software) promote or advertise prostituti­on in some way or the other.

Even a well known mobile applicatio­n and website, Ju*t Dial, helps one find a nearby 24x7 massage parlour, along with their contact numbers. The contact numbers listed are usually of pimps, who readily share photograph­s of the available girls on WhatsApp and the prices are negotiated accordingl­y.

The Cyber Crime Cell of Delhi police has little knowl- edge about all this. An official admitted on the condition of anonymity, “We do not have any knowledge that such things are happening. These things go unreported because people do not like to talk about such things in the open. From the time we have opened this branch, we have not received any complaints on such issues.” He further added that the internet is a borderless space and to monitor all content with a handful of staff is a daunting task.

Pawan Duggal, an advocate and expert on cyber

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