ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court of Pakistan has turned down petition of a girl, who claimed to have been subjected to sexual exploitation and gang-rape, for being ‘non-maintainable’. A 20-year-old girl from Khanpur Bagga Sher village of Muzaffargarh district had moved a petition under Article 184 (3) in the SC on April 8, pleading that she had been gang-raped for almost eight months by the members of a law enforcement agency. An official of the SC said that the petition was rejected by the registrar office with four objections. One of the objections attached with the petition cites it an ‘individual grievance’. An earlier judgment, wherein a victim had sought justice from SC in individual capacity, is also attached while refusing to entertain the plea. Counsel for the petitioner Zulfiqar Bhutta confirmed to Daily Times that the petition was turned down, adding he was preparing a reply and is likely to challenge the registrar office’s decision on Monday (today). The petitioner said she joined a private security company near Faisal Stadium in Muzaffargarh in July 2015, where she was raped by members of a law-enforcement agency before camera for eight months. The police personnel also introduced her on mobile phone to someone who claimed to be Muzaffargarh DPO. Later, the employer started blackmailing her by threatening that if she failed to extend vulgar favours, he would upload her pictures on internet, according to the petition. She requested the SC to direct Punjab chief secretary and the inspector general of police to submit complete record of cases or FIRs in which a number of girls had been victimised through discreet snapping of indecent pictures or videos to blackmail them for sexual favours.