In Bhopal, the capital city of Madhya Pradesh 26 girls are missing from a girls’ home. Girls from several states inhabited it. Regarding the whereabouts of these girls, nobody knows. According to the preliminary inquiry, the girls’ shelter home was being operated unlawfully.
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What is the matter?
26 out of 68 girls were reported missing following an examination of the Anchal Missionary Organization’s girls’ home in the Parwalia police station district of Bhopal. The girls were mostly from different states. The remaining forty-one girls are from Raisen, Chhindwara, Balaghat, Sehore, Vidisha, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, and Gujarat. Chief Secretary Veera Rana has received a letter from National Commission for Protection of Child Rights Chairman Priyank Kanungo regarding this. Within seven days, an investigation report is also requested. The Parvaliya police station has also filed a formal complaint (FIR) on the subject.
Was the orphanage running unlawfully?
Concerning this, the girls’ home was visited on Friday by the State Child Rights Protection Commission. wherein it became apparent that the children’s home was run without authorization or registration. Government officials were not notified of the keeping of orphan children. In light of this, there is growing suspicion that the Anchal Missionary Organization is converting girls. Numerous irregularities were discovered in the girls’ house during the assessment.
Priyank Kanungo shared the information
The State Child Commission Chairman and members jointly inspected an unlawful children’s home managed by a missionary in Tarasevnia, Bhopal, the capital of Madhya Pradesh, according to a post made on social media by Priyank Kanungo, the chairman of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights. Up until recently, the active NGO in this area collaborated with Child Line as if it were a government organization.
What is the police doing?
After much difficulty, the police registered a formal complaint against the director, who while serving as a government representative had rescued the children from the streets, was keeping them in secret in a girls’ home that was being run without a license, without informing the government, and forcing them to practice Christianity. The majority of the over forty girls residing there, aged between six and eighteen, are Hindu. Regrettably, the officials of the Women and Child Development Department of Madhya Pradesh want to run the child helpline on contract from such NGOs.
Rural SP Bhopal According to Pramod Singh, a case has been filed under the Juvenile Justice Act. It has come to light that 26 girls who were included in the register are missing. The investigation into the situation is ongoing, and the expansion of the sections will follow suit.