CM asks DGP to make a strong case against accused …

PANAJI:  Taking notice of the case wherein a family of an engineer inflicted severe burns on a minor girl from scheduled tribe community, the Chief Minister, Mr Digambar Kamat informed the House on Thursday that he has personally discussed the matter with the state Director-General of Police and asked him to apply all possible stringent sections of the Indian Penal Code upon the accused, and further ensure that a strong case stands in the court against them.

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Aid for burnt girl from goverment

Follow up …..

Goa: Chief minister Digambar Kamat on Monday announced that the government will compensate the 10-year-old maid who was burnt by her employers at Porvorim.  ”The government promised to give 10-year-old girl from Porvorim financial aid of Rs 25,000. We will also see that she gets help through a NGO,” Kamat said.



Goa. District Salcete schools taking steps to end corporal punishment…….

The National Commission for Protection of Child Rights has come out with more guidelines to the district collector on corporal punishment. The guidelines have directed the collector to hold block-wise meetings for all school headmasters on corporal punishment and convey to the schools that serious action would be taken against them for any act of violence against the children.

School managements in Salcete taluka have started discussing the guidelines. Several schools have organised talks on corporal punishment.

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Man arrested for burning minor girl…..

Director of NGO, SCAN Audrey Pinto said that since the past two or three months the three accused have been allegedly assaulting the minor girl with cable wires and also burned her placing a hot, flat steel frying pan on the girl’s thighs and back resulting in the burn injuries.

In a gruesome case of child abuse, a ten year old girl employed as a maid in a house at Porvorim was admitted to the Goa Medical College and Hospital with burn injuries on her thighs and back.

Read More …… …. Times

Goa Police’s Child Protection unit in deep slumber….

This article came on the Gomantak times on 25th July 2009

Panjim: If you are a women or child and in distress, think twice before you call up the Goa Police’s Women and Child Protection Unit (WCPU). They are notorious for ignoring phone calls.

In what appears to be yet another case of carelessness, the WCPU left at least five calls from a local unattended, who desperately wanted to inform about the pathetic condition of a girl in Siolim yesterday morning.

After initial reluctance, however, the tormenter of the girl (her own husband) was finally arrested, not by the WCPU but the Mapusa Police. The arrest was affected yesterday evening with much humiliation to the victim, who was seeking justice and was summarily denied Succour by the Women and Child Protection Unit.

It was a journalist, a GT, staffer, who had found the girl on the roadside at Siolim, and played Samaritan to rescue the 14 years old.

The GT staffer found the seemingly desperate child sobbing bitterly under the shade of a mango tree. On inquires with her. He discovered that she was married about four months ago to a married man who had driven his previous wife and their children away. Her husband Ismail Tiwari (28) who is now in the custody of Mapusa Police, had brought the victim girl from Karnataka and eventually married her.

“Life with this man was like living in hell,” the tender girl told the GT staffer who referred her to the Mapusa Police Station after failing in his attempts at the WCPU. The girl with her two small bags packed with clothes wanted to go to a cousin who lived at the Mapusa housing board, but didn’t know the cousin’s name or address in the colony. At the Mapusa police station, the girl disclosed that her husband used to assault her and unable to bear her trauma she shared her fate with her divorced mother, who in fact had pushed her into the marriage with Tiwari as she had two other younger girl children to look after.

“The girl told the police that she was constantly being harassed by her husband and demanded cash from her mother,” a police officer told GT adding that her statement was recorded in the presence NGO members. Tiwari has been booked under section 8 of Goa Children’s Act, 2003 and section 498 (harassment) of Indian Penal Code.

Goa Medical College sources said, the girl was examined for about two hours to ascertain physical and sexual assault on her. She will also be subjected to an ossification test, to ascertain her exact age, Mapusa police said.

Care-a-damn attitude

WHEN he found the hapless girl, the GT staffer made several attempts to contact WCPU, but not one of the six calls made were attended to by anybody. He then called 108 but it was not functioning and so he called Apna Ghar at Merces, where ‘come through proper channel’ was the terse response he got.

Skeptical of the ‘proper channel’ route, the GT staffer then dialed 100, and then things began failing in place with Papusa police swinging into action and PSI Mohan Naik and a lady constable, Reshma Nail reaching the spot to escort the victim to the police station.

22-year-old cleared of rape charges…

The children’s court on Friday exonerated one Aslam Sheikh, charged for kidnapping and raping a minor girl in Margao, as the victim did not reveal the date and time of the sexual assault.

President of the court B P Deshpande observed that a victim who does not remember the time, date or month, even approximately, of the sexual assault, cannot be relied upon.

We at SCAN-India wounder what will be the next land mark judgement from Childrens Court of Goa. We feel now that we require a teacher at children’s court to teach the victim and prepare her to answer the date, time in detail as the chargesheet if the accused is on bail is filed after 1 year or more.

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NCPCR issues directives to schools to stop corporal punishment…..

Goa: Goa Children Act 2003 bans corporal punishment. Hope the guidelines pave a way for strick.

In addition to this the chairperson of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights, Ms Shanta Sinha has issued additional guidelines to the district collector on corporal punishment and has directed schools to hold block-wise meeting for the headmasters on corporal punishment and also to convey them that serious action would be taken against school as a whole on the act of violence on the children.

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