
A missing person report filed over a decade ago, combined with facial recognition and newer artificial intelligence (AI) tools, has helped a young Pakistani woman reunite with her family 17 years after she went missing.
Kiran was just 10 when she stepped out to buy an ice cream in her Islamabad neighbourhood in 2008 — and never found her way back. “I was lost and crying. A kind woman took me to the Edhi Centre because I couldn’t remember my address,” the now 27-year-old recalled, news agency PTI reported.
A few days later, Bilquis Edhi, the late wife of humanitarian Abdul Sattar Edhi, shifted her to the Edhi Foundation shelter home in Karachi, where Kiran spent the rest of her childhood. Despite repeated trips to Islamabad and efforts by the foundation, her parents could not be traced.
Earlier this year, the Edhi Foundation sought help from Nabeel Ahmed, a cybersecurity specialist with Punjab’s Safe City Project. “We shared her latest photographs and whatever fragments of childhood memories she had,” said Sabah Faisal Edhi, wife of the Foundation’s chairperson Faisal Edhi.
Ahmed located an old police report of a missing girl from Islamabad and used AI-driven facial recognition and tracking tools to match it with Kiran’s details. The digital trail led him to her family.
Abdul Majeed, a tailor by profession, travelled to Karachi as soon as he received the news. He said the family had searched for years — even publishing her photograph in newspapers — but eventually lost hope. “When officials contacted us saying they had found our daughter, we couldn’t believe it,” he said.
Kiran, while excited to return home, said she would always remain grateful to the Edhi family. “I am sad to leave everyone here. Bilquis apa took such good care of us,” she said.
She is the fifth girl at the Edhi shelter whose family has been traced through collaborations between the foundation, police and Safe City Projects across Pakistan.
(With Inputs from PTI)