According to reports on November 16 in Karachi, Muhammad Jamil called the Trakker Control Room to report that his partner and a friend had been kidnapped. The kidnappers abducted the pair in the city of Peshawar, along with their Toyota Corolla, subsequently demanding five million Pakistan rupees for the hostages’ release.
Trakker immediately located the stolen vehicle in the Bat Khela area of Malakand Agency in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) – a notorious hideout for kidnappers and car-jackers – using advanced Ctrack tracking technology. Following this, the Trakker Response Team (TRT), the police, the Levies (a law and order force recruited along tribal or clan lines) and the Deputy Commissioner’s Offi ce (DCO) of Malakand Agency
were informed. Less than 24 hours after Jamil’s initial report, the TRT recovered the vehicle from a house adjacent to a school in Bat Khela. The team also apprehended two suspects along with the vehicle. They claimed that the car had been parked at their house by the Pesh Imam (prayer leader) of the local mosque. Under interrogation, the Pesh imam confessed to being one of the kidnappers, and after he had made one phone call, the hostages were released.
This is just one incident of many in Pakistan since Trakker’s inception in the country five years ago, and is an excellent example of its burgeoning partnership with Ctrack, the global leader in vehicle tracking technology.
According to reports on November 16 in Karachi, Muhammad Jamil called the Trakker Control Room to report that his partner and a friend had been kidnapped. The kidnappers abducted the pair in the city of Peshawar, along with their Toyota Corolla, subsequently demanding five million Pakistan rupees for the hostages’ release.
Trakker immediately located the stolen vehicle in the Bat Khela area of Malakand Agency in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) – a notorious hideout for kidnappers and car-jackers – using advanced Ctrack tracking technology. Following this, the Trakker Response Team (TRT), the police, the Levies (a law and order force recruited along tribal or clan lines) and the Deputy Commissioner’s Offi ce (DCO) of Malakand Agency
were informed. Less than 24 hours after Jamil’s initial report, the TRT recovered the vehicle from a house adjacent to a school in Bat Khela. The team also apprehended two suspects along with the vehicle. They claimed that the car had been parked at their house by the Pesh Imam (prayer leader) of the local mosque. Under interrogation, the Pesh imam confessed to being one of the kidnappers, and after he had made one phone call, the hostages were released.
This is just one incident of many in Pakistan since Trakker’s inception in the country five years ago, and is an excellent example of its burgeoning partnership with Ctrack, the global leader in vehicle tracking technology.