AMBALA: Railway Protection Force personnel found two unattended children, one 9 and one four, wandering in the Ambala Cantonment railway station on Wednesday night. They took the children to their workplace and contacted child helpline on the quantity 1098. After documentation, the kid helpline group handed the children over to the district child welfare committee (DCWC), which is chatting with them to understand more about them and the way they reached Ambala from Mumbai.
Gurdev Singh, member of the DCWC stated the children, Rutan Kumari, 9 and her brother Amul, four, stated their oldsters are named Shyam and Neetu. “The children do not know how they reached Ambala and may no longer provide their correct deal with in Mumbai either. They only stated they belong to Mumbai. Since they do not speak fluent Hindi, our group is operating arduous to suggest them,” Gurdev Singh stated.
Gurdev also stated they do not wish to scare the children and are seeking to win their confidence. He stated Rutan, who understands things neatly, can explain how they controlled to come back thus far clear of home. He stated the children have been medically examined on the civil sanatorium and their stories have been standard.
However, the DCWC group feels the girl is concealing some information. Gurdev stated she advised them her father used to overcome them, in order that they left the house. The children shall be endorsed through any other group of the district child protection officer, and the DCWC group is coordinating with CWC teams of Mumbai and Maharashtra. They have shared photos of the children with them.
If the whereabouts of the children is not traced in the subsequent 24 hours, they will be shifted to Shishu Greh in Panchkula, the place they will be taken care of. Both children shall be stored in combination. Gurdev also requested the government to set up a digital database of kids with CWCs of the country. He stated the sort of database with the CWCs would enable them to track lost children temporarily.
In the following assembly, Gurdev stated, they will talk about the issue of digital database and write to the deputy commissioner and ministers. He also stated aadhar database can help find the positioning of lost children temporarily.
Gurdev Singh, member of the DCWC stated the children, Rutan Kumari, 9 and her brother Amul, four, stated their oldsters are named Shyam and Neetu. “The children do not know how they reached Ambala and may no longer provide their correct deal with in Mumbai either. They only stated they belong to Mumbai. Since they do not speak fluent Hindi, our group is operating arduous to suggest them,” Gurdev Singh stated.
Gurdev also stated they do not wish to scare the children and are seeking to win their confidence. He stated Rutan, who understands things neatly, can explain how they controlled to come back thus far clear of home. He stated the children have been medically examined on the civil sanatorium and their stories have been standard.
However, the DCWC group feels the girl is concealing some information. Gurdev stated she advised them her father used to overcome them, in order that they left the house. The children shall be endorsed through any other group of the district child protection officer, and the DCWC group is coordinating with CWC teams of Mumbai and Maharashtra. They have shared photos of the children with them.
If the whereabouts of the children is not traced in the subsequent 24 hours, they will be shifted to Shishu Greh in Panchkula, the place they will be taken care of. Both children shall be stored in combination. Gurdev also requested the government to set up a digital database of kids with CWCs of the country. He stated the sort of database with the CWCs would enable them to track lost children temporarily.
In the following assembly, Gurdev stated, they will talk about the issue of digital database and write to the deputy commissioner and ministers. He also stated aadhar database can help find the positioning of lost children temporarily.
Two unattended children reach Ambala from Mumbai
Reviewed by Kailash
on
June 22, 2018
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