The Weekly
Observer Volume 14 | Issue 6
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
At least 11 women are molested in Bangalore every week.
Bureaucratic games keep villagers without ration cards
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Stolen bikes cause Namma Metro scheme to hit the skids
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Runaway children caged, abused and abandoned Shruti Suresh Children who ran away from a government home were being locked up every day by staff. At least 20 children at the govt home developed a skin allergy which wasn’t cured despite taking medicines. Aslam, 12, said, “I have the infection for past one month. The doctor here gave some pills but it didn’t help.” According to Rahim, 10, “The infection has spread to the entire body of two other children.” Mohit, 12, said: “We are not happy with the food. We are given insufficient rice and sambhar is watery.” At least eight children worked in the kitchen and swept the courtyard. Prem, 14, said: “The kitchen staff used to come and cook only breakfast. Nowadays, they don’t come.” Prem added: “We are supposed to speak to our parents every Saturday, but they don't allow us to call them. Even if our parents call us, they won’t let us attend the call.” Weekly Observer reporters visited the home just days before the children ran away.
They revealed incidents like the children being locked up after lunch till 4 PM, to reduce responsibility of the staff. Mani, 15, an inmate for the past four months, said: “This happens so that we won't run around in the courtyard as it becomes difficult for them to handle us.” Mani said: “After the incident in August when a 13year-old rescued child was mercilessly beaten up using rods by the caretaker for not washing toilets, the staff is very careful since that caretaker was arrested.” A parent said: “One more child had tried escaping on Sunday night but injured himself after getting caught in the fence. The child said that they were living without proper food, drinking water and toilets. The children are made to clean toilets and are mistreated when they don’t comply.” On contacting Shakeela, mother of one of the kids, she said: “Raju left home to work, about two years back. He used to call us from where he was working. But for the past four months we had not heard from him.” According to the Wilson Garden Police, efforts to
Children at Government Shelter Home for Boys search for the runaways were on-going but none of the 18 children could be traced since they ran away on Sunday.
According to Gurumurthy, 50, who is working as an aid to provide foreign education to the students at the shelter home: “There
are six security guards assigned during the night. But instead of doing their duty, they go to their quarters.”
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