The court order on school safety is a warning bell
It must put the fear of the law into owners who put commerce before students’ safety
It is a scathing indictment of negligent school owners. The Supreme Court on Monday emphasised the need to implement safety guidelines for children in schools across India that will make school authorities liable to face punitive action in the event of violations. The court was hearing a petition filed by the father of the seven-year-old boy who was found murdered on the premises of Gurugram’s Ryan International School on the morning of September 8.
In the wake of the outrage that followed the boy’s murder, the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) had asked schools to conduct a security audit within two months. The advisory included directives such as installing CCTVS, psychometric evaluation for staff, constitution of a parent-teacher body, and controlled access to school premises. It also asked schools to constitute committees to redress the grievances of the parents, staff and students and set up panels to prevent sexual harassment under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offence) Act, 2012. Details of these panels along, with contact details, should be displayed on the notice board and the school website. The apex court’s intervention could not have come at a more appropriate time. The CBSE had recently filed an affidavit stating that the Gurugram incident took place owing to “severe irregularities and security lapses” on the school premises. The affidavit noted that the authorities had failed in their duty of reporting the murder to the police. It also pointed to the absence of sufficient CCTV cameras and flouting of fire safety laws.
Can simply increasing the number of CCTVS make the school premises safer for our children? Do we also need other steps such as police verification of all staff, including teachers? It is time the judiciary put the fear of the law into callous school authorities who are cutting corners and putting commerce before student safety.