Why in news?
Humanitarian Aid Organisation’s survey reports that one out of every two Indian children has experienced sexual abuse.
What are the reasons behind increasing Child abuse?
- In large cities, children spend as many as 8 to 9 hours a day away from home, and those in smaller towns and rural areas spend 5 to 6 hours outside the home.
- There is a three-way trust deficit between schools, parents and the Government, especially when there is a gruesome incidence of violence against children, gets aggravated.
What measures needs to be taken in schools?
- An open dialogue involving all three stakeholders will go a long way towards to enable the building preventive response mechanisms.
- There is a need to develop a Uniform Child Protection Policy for all schools private or government, and even tribal ashrams in remote parts of the country.
- The policy should emphasise on ‘gatekeeping’ to ensure that the recruitment of both teaching and non-teaching staff is done after thorough police verification and psycho-social assessment.
- Also trained counsellors must be enrolled mandatorily in schools who can both prevent and detect abuse of children.
- All teachers need to be sensitised about child abuse, taught to recognise it and made aware of laws such as the POCSO Act .
- Awareness Sessions for children on safety and prevention of abuse also ought to become part of the curriculum.
What are the Existing child abuse preventive mechanisms?
- National Policy for Children, 2013 - recognises every person below the age of eighteen years as a child and covers all children within the territory and jurisdiction of the country.
- Four key priority areas in Policy are
- Survival, Health and Nutrition.
- Education and Development.
- Protection and Participation.
- Focused Attention
- Prevention of Children from Sexual Offences (POSCO) Act 2012 - It protects children from offenses of sexual abuse, sexual harassment and pornography and to provide a child-friendly system for the trial of these offences.
- Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Amendment Act 2015
Source: Business Line