Child trafficking: Situation gone from bad to worse, says SC
A bench made the observations while interacting with a Delhi police inspector entrusted with the probe in a case over trafficking of several newborns in Dwarka area.
PTI
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Supreme Court of India (PTI)
New Delhi, 21 April
While asking Delhi Police to take steps to arrest an accused
behind a children trafficking racket in the capital, the Supreme Court on
Monday said the "situation seems to have gone from bad to worse".
A bench comprising justices JB Pardiwala and R Mahadevan
made the observations while interacting with a Delhi police inspector entrusted
with the probe in a case over trafficking of several newborns in Dwarka area.
"The situation seems to have gone from bad to
worse," Justice Pardiwala said and directed the police station concerned
to take all necessary steps to arrest gang leader Puja and three missing
infants.
Taking a dim view of the alleged involvement of parents in
trafficking of infants, the bench said "You never know where these
children will land up. In the case of a girl child, you know where she
lands."
The judge added, "Unfortunately, the parents of the
infants seem to have sold off their own children."
The bench posted case after four weeks and asked the police
officer to apprise it of the steps taken in the case at hand.
“You have to find these missing children at any cost and
arrest the kingpin,” the bench said.
Delhi Police was represented by additional solicitor general
Archana Pathak Dave.
The top court on 15 April delivered a significant judgement
on the issue of inter-state child trafficking rackets in another case.
It then cancelled the bail granted to 13 accused in that
case and said the "cry of the collective for justice, its desire for peace
and harmony" couldn't be trivialised.
The top court asked the government to ensure the trafficked
children were admitted in schools in accordance with the provisions of the
Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 and had continued
support towards education.
The top court observed trafficking in India took diverse
forms -- each prevailing across states.
"An overall analysis of trafficking patterns across
states reiterates the prevalence of trafficking in large numbers with the
number of cases sharply rising with time. What is of concern is the rapid
spread of the problem with previously unknown factors getting embedded in the
web of traffickers," it said.
The changing trafficking patterns, the court said, brought
"changes in the traffickers, their modus operandi, their manipulation of
the victims and their understanding of the limitations in the criminal justice
system".
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