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Close to 50% of children in India face abuse,
says study:
http://www.hindu.com/2007/03/21/stories/2007032100500900.htm
<http://www.hindu.com/2007/03/21/stories/2007032100500900.htm>

NEW DELHI: Child abuse is widely prevalent in the country and close to
50 per cent face some forms of exploitation irrespective of their
background, according to the National Child Abuse Study, the first of
its kind on child abuse.

Conducted by Prayas, a Delhi-based non-governmental organisation (NGO)
for the Ministry of Women and Child Development, in collaboration with
the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) and Save the Children Fund,
the study suggests that 30 per cent are sexually abused by  relatives or
known persons, nearly 50 per cent are emotionally abused, 40 per cent
physically and 60 per cent economically (including child labour).

"This is the largest study on child abuse in India and the findings are
being analysed by a Drafting Committee set up by the Women and Child
Development Ministry before a final conclusion is arrived at," Prayas
general secretary, Amod Kanth told The Hindu .

Until now it was presumed that child abuse was prevalent only among
street children or those in juvenile homes and orphanages.

But the study has shown that it cuts across economic, social, and class
barriers. Only the forms of abuse are different, Mr. Kanth said.

While a child born in a well-to-do family may not face economic and
physical abuse, he or she is prone to sexual and emotional abuse, the
ones born under difficult conditions are vulnerable to all kinds of
exploitation, he explained.

The study, likely to be released by the end of this month,  will be
presented when the United Nations reviews the Millennium Development
Goals (MDG) later this year.

According to the survey, more than 40 per cent of the children have
faced corporal punishment and at least 5 per cent of the respondents
have resorted to substance (drugs) to cope with the sexual or physical
trauma they were subjected to.

Child abuse has been defined under different categories such as
emotional that includes gender-based discrimination; sexual abuse that
can range from fondling to rape; economic abuse as forced labour and
physical abuse when force is used by people in position, be it parents
or teachers.

Covering 13 States including Delhi, Rajasthan, West Bengal, Kerala,
Bihar, Goa, Maharashtra, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh, the survey
interacted with about 16,800 children. Of these 13,000 were below 18
years, 3000 young adults (18-25 years) and about 800 stakeholders like
the NGOs and those involved with children's issues.

The study  clearly brings out that child protection is a low priority
area in the country with only a minuscule percentage of the annual
expenditure (Rs. 215 crore last year) being spent on children.

However, this time round the Women and Child Development Ministry has
sought Rs. 2,000 crore under the Eleventh Five Year Plan for
implementation of the ambitious Integrated Child Protection Scheme.

The study is expected to pave the way for the speedy implementation of
the Scheme. There are close to 35 million children in the country living
under difficult conditions, one-third of whom are destitute. In
contrast, the total availability of shelters in the government and
private sector is only for 36,500 children.

Importantly, there is hardly any provision for children in the age group
of 6-18 years while those below 6 years are covered under the Integrated
Child Development Scheme.

India set for tougher Child Abuse law:
http://www.ndtv.com/morenews/showmorestory.asp?category=National&id=1023\
22
<http://www.ndtv.com/morenews/showmorestory.asp?category=National&id=102\
322>

Monday, March 19, 2007 (New Delhi):

India's National Commission for Children on Monday backed tough measures
to protect children from abuse. Its chairperson Shanta Sinha said
children should become a part of national conscience to prevent abuse.
Her biggest tool could be the new Child Protection Bill. The draft of
the Bill is awaiting approval by the Cabinet.

"The first task is to know who the victims are," Sinha said in an
exlusive interview to NDTV.

Non-bailable offence
Forty-two per cent of India's population are children and crimes against
them will soon become a non-bailable offence.  The legislation will
provide authorities with a mechanism to identify and punish offenders
for crimes against children. The Ministry for Women and Child
Development feels existing  laws are inadequate to recognise and
penalise offenders.

Sinha says trafficking and sexual exploitation of children should be on
top of the nation's agenda. "There is just no data, if we don't know how
many children are victims, how will we formulate policies? It's a
monumental task but need to collate data of how many children are
missing how many are trafficked," said Sinha, a winner of the Magsaysay
Award.

According to the draft of the Child Protection Bill: It will be
compulsory for doctors, teachers and social workers to report cases of
child abuse to the authorities. Sources say while exploitation of women
and crimes like rape have stringent laws there is little protection for
boys from abuse – an area that the new bill will address.

Exploitation
The current laws also do not recognise exploitation of children either
through sex tourism, child labour or violence against children including
emotional abuse or instances like deliberate  starvation. Sinha says
children between 0-6 age group are not on anyone's radar  "Children of
all ages are important till six years of age." Till now laws related to
children have had minimal impact. But recent incident involving murder
and rape of children in Nithari near Delhi exposes the inability to
protect them from abuse.
moderator edited, assamonline

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