EN اردو عربي
← zinaaa
SafetySextortionPakistanBlackmail

Sextortion Scams.
How they work. How to escape.

If this is happening to you right now: Stop. Do not pay anything. Do not send more images. Call FIA Cybercrime: 0800-02345 (free, 24/7). Then read this page fully.

Sextortion is one of the fastest-growing cybercrimes in Pakistan. The FIA Cybercrime Wing registered over 4,000 cases in 2023 alone — and those are only the cases that were reported. Most victims never report because they are ashamed. That shame is exactly what the criminals rely on.

This is not your fault. It is a well-organised scam. The people running it have done this hundreds of times before you.

How the scam works — step by step

Step 1 — The approach

A profile contacts you. The profile photo is of a young, attractive woman. The account may be on WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, or a dating app. The profile has photos, sometimes a real-looking social media history. The conversation is warm, flirtatious, interested. She seems genuine.

In most cases, the person behind the profile is a man — often part of an organised group operating from areas of Pakistan with documented cybercrime activity (certain areas of Punjab have been repeatedly identified by FIA). In some cases, the photos are stolen from real women's social media accounts. The "woman" you are talking to does not exist.

Step 2 — Building trust

The conversation continues over days or weeks. She shares personal details. She asks about you. She becomes intimate in conversation. She may send voice notes (these can be generated by AI or recorded by a female accomplice). She builds a sense of relationship.

The goal is to make you feel that this is real — that you have something to lose if the conversation ends.

Step 3 — The video call invitation

She suggests a video call. WhatsApp, Snapchat, a third-party app. She appears on camera — nude or partially nude. This is the trap moment. She is either a real person hired as an accomplice, or the video is pre-recorded and being streamed back. In either case, she encourages you to appear on camera. She asks you to reciprocate. She may ask directly for sexual content.

The moment you expose yourself on camera, the recording begins.

Step 4 — The blackmail

Within seconds or minutes of the call ending, you receive a message. The message includes a screenshot or clip of you. It includes your name, your phone contacts, your social media profiles — which were scraped the moment you connected. The demand: pay within 24 hours or the video goes to your family, your employer, your contacts list.

The payment demand is typically PKR 20,000–200,000 initially. If you pay, it does not end. It escalates. They have your number now. They know you pay.

What happens if you pay

Do not pay. Under any circumstances. Not once. Not a small amount to "buy time."

Every person who has paid has reported that payment did not stop the blackmail. Payment confirms:

The FIA has documented cases where victims paid over PKR 2 million across multiple payments before reporting. The blackmail never stopped — it only ended when the victim reported to authorities or cut off contact entirely.

What to do — right now

If the video was already sent

If the video has been distributed to your contacts, or posted online:

Why men don't report — and why they should

The FIA estimates that for every sextortion case reported, 10–15 go unreported. The reason is always the same: shame. Men — especially in Pakistani society — feel that admitting they were manipulated into showing themselves on camera is a loss of honour.

This shame is the criminals' most powerful tool. It is also completely unwarranted.

You were targeted by a professional criminal network that has done this hundreds of times. They used psychological manipulation techniques developed over years. The FIA has arrested members of these networks. They are not individuals — they are organised crime. You are a victim of organised crime. Victims of organised crime are not dishonoured. They are owed protection.

Reporting your case may directly lead to the arrest of people who are currently victimising dozens of other people. Your report is not just for you.

Red flags — before the trap closes

How Zinaaa protects against this

Sextortion scams thrive on cold-approach contact. A stranger reaches out. You don't know them. The vulnerability is in that first unsolicited message.

On Zinaaa, no one can contact you unless you have both signalled mutual interest through the Sparks system. A man cannot message a woman unsolicited. The Sparks mechanic requires both parties to be physically nearby and to have indicated openness to connection.

Fake profiles cannot sustain a pattern of poor interactions without accumulating low star ratings. Low-rated accounts lose visibility. The accountability loop applies to fraudulent actors — they cannot maintain credibility on the platform indefinitely.

This does not make sextortion impossible on Zinaaa. It makes it structurally harder, and it means the warning signs are easier to see when they appear.

Report now — helplines

FIA Cybercrime (free, 24/7)0800-02345
FIA Online Reportcomplaint.fia.gov.pk
Cyber Harassment Helpline (DRF)0800-39393
StopNCII (image removal)stopncii.org
NCERT1991
Zinaaa Safety[email protected]

← Safety hub

💋