Editorials
By : Sangai Editorials
It is more than a call for a policy statement. Central to the demand for a
Child Policy in the State is the explicit admission that the child of today is
exposed to numerous hazards. An admission that the inbuilt mechanisms of society
have failed to ensure the protection of the child from dangers that may come
under different shapes and sizes and hence a legislation is needed from the
State. It is against this backdrop that the demand
raised by the Manipur Alliance for Child Rights should be viewed and
appreciated. Again it is in line with this sentiment that
steps are afoot to constitute the Manipur State Commission for Child Rights to
be headed by a Chairperson along with three members and a Member Secretary. The
need to come out with a policy to go some way in protecting the rights and
privileges of the child is in direct proportion to the all pervading feeling
that the safety of the child, especially the girl child, can no
longer be taken for granted. A damning statement on society as a
whole and there is nothing to gloss over this. Way back in 2003, a Class III
student, Lungnila Elizabeth was kidnapped from outside her school with her
decomposed body discovered a few days later. Hriini Hubert and Muheni Martin
went missing for days before their skeletal remains were found days later on a
hillock at Senapati district headquarters, a few years later. Mind numbing cases
of crime against the child and no these cannot be taken as aberrations for these
are just two examples that have been cited. In between and earlier too, there
have been cases of children being outraged, molested, raped and killed.
Obviously the world no longer acknowledges the innocence of the child and
Manipur is not an exception to this.
In fact situation has come to such a pass that it is no longer thought safe
for children to roam around the neighbourhood, more so for the girl child. A
reflection of a sick and decadent society, which has hit rock bottom on the
moral graph. A scary situation indeed. Laws and legislations will not amount to
foolproof measures to ensure the protection and security of the child, but it is
time for the State to acknowledge that adults by and large have failed to
provide a secure environment for the kids. This is where the need for the State
to step in arises. At the least the message that the State does care for the
safety and security for the children would have been rung out. This is
important. Demented minds will continue to stalk the weak and the vulnerable and
children occupy a prominent spot in the list of the vulnerable. And the past has
demonstrated how easily children have been at the receiving end of some of these
perverts. As things go here, it has been more a case of non-State actors
dispensing their brand of justice, when crimes are committed against children,
exposing the weakness of the State agencies. Rights of the child need not be
seen only through the prism of physical violence committed against them, but
should also be seen in the larger context of their right to education, right to
food and right to grow up in a conducive atmosphere. The interesting question is
whether the State has been able to ensure any of these or is more guilty of
depriving these inherent rights wilfully or through sheer apathy and corruption.
A State Child Policy should look to address these issues and more.
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