Friday, April 16, 2010

Panel to probe child trafficking

source-The Telegraph

Imphal, April 16: A two-member team of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights will arrive here tomorrow to investigate child trafficking from Manipur to other parts of the country, particularly to Tamil Nadu.

Following a Supreme Court directive, the registrar of the commission, Binod Kumar Sahu and its consultant Ramnath Nayak, visited Chennai to investigate cases of child trafficking from Manipur and Assam to the southern states.

On March 31, a three-judge bench of Chief Justice K.G. Balakrishnan, Justice Deepak Verma and Justice B.S. Chauhan asked the commission to complete the probe in four weeks and submit a report and posted the matter for hearing in May.

“There was need for some investigation as children belonging to poor families from the northeastern region were lured by some illegal organisations on the pretext of providing better education,” the chief justice had said.

The bench was hearing a petition on trafficking of 76 children from Assam and Manipur.

The children, aged between five and 15, were rescued from Bethesada Blessing Home, run illegally in Chennai, on January 24.

Following the apex court’s directive, the two-member team visited Chennai and on April 11 talked to senior officials to collect information regarding the rescue of the children from Manipur and Assam from the home near Kuzhithurai in Kanyakumari district.

Sources in the social welfare department here said nearly a hundred children from Manipur were taken to Tamil Nadu on the false promise of getting free education, were rescued this year.

In two separate recent incidents, children and teenagers were intercepted at Sekmai in Imphal West while they were travelling in buses on their way to Mumbai and Chennai.

The children rescued and intercepted at Sekmai are from the valley and hill districts, including Churachandpur and Ukhrul. They were handed over to their parents and guardians after counselling.

Official sources said the two-member team would discuss with officials of the social welfare department, child activists and the members of child welfare committees to collect information on the traffickers’ modus operandi.

The team will visit Tamenglong, one of the worst-affected districts in Manipur.

The sources also said the team would examine two recent cases of child trafficking in the state.

A headmistress of a private school, Narmada Rana, was arrested on March 31 on charges of cruelty to juveniles, wrongful confinement, kidnapping and using children as labourers.

The police took her into custody after two minors were rescued from her Imphal house and another girl who had fled the headmistress’s house was also rescued. She is now out on bail.

On April 10, the police picked up a couple who had allegedly sold off a nine-month-old baby to another couple. The couple were released the next day.

The release of the couple angered child rights activists who are preparing a report.

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