Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Govt wants kids to do more for old parents

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: India is considerin­g widening the definition of children and removing the cap on maintenanc­e payable to senior citizens through proposed changes in a law on the welfare of senior citizens.

The ministry of social justice and empowermen­t has proposed doing away with the ~10,000 ceiling currently in place, and wants to link the amount to the sources of income of the senior citizens and their children, a government official familiar with the matter said on condition of anonymity.

According to this person, the ministry has recommende­d widening the definition of children to include adopted or step children, sons-in-law and daughters-inlaw, grandchild­ren, even minors represente­d by their legal guardians.

Currently, the term includes only sons, daughters, and grandchild­ren, excluding minors.

India has 104 million people over the age of 60, according to the 2011 Census.

Anecdotall­y, the number of instances of senior citizens being abandoned by their children is on an increase, alth-ough the National Crime Records Bureau doesn’t track this.

The proposal will now be sent to the union cabinet for approval. It follows feedback from senior citizens and non-government organisati­ons (NGOs) working with the disadvanta­ged elderly on the need to revisit the conditions for payment of the allowance under the Maintenanc­e and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens (MWPSC) Act, 2007.

After the MWPSC was enacted in 2007, tribunals were constitute­d to enforce its provisions including payment of the maintenanc­e allowance.

Senior citizens can file an applicatio­n before these tribunals to claim maintenanc­e and seek relief if their assets and immovable property are forcibly taken over by their children or other relatives.

Alongside widening the definition of children, the ministry of social justice and empowermen­t has suggested that any person (whether a child or a relative of a childless senior citizen), who has the means will have to look after the senior citizen or parent, even if they are not in possession of their property.

According to the official cited above, maintenanc­e of such senior citizens has hitherto been the duty of children or other caretakers only if they were in possession of their property or were likely to inherit it.

“The definition of senior citizen itself has been clarified; those who have attained the age of 60 are senior citizens and will be eligible for all benefits meant for the category.

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