Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Dantewada: Blue Whale gets 30 children hooked

- Ritesh Mishra letters@hindustant­imes.com

RAIPUR: At least 30 children in the Maoist-hit Dantewada district of Chhattisga­rh have been found playing the Blue Whale challenge, police said on Friday, underlinin­g the lethal online game’s increasing reach into even remote stretches of India.

Assistant superinten­dent of police Abhishek Pallav told HT that they “rescued” 30 tribal children from the government high school, Dantewada, on Thursday after school authoritie­s reported that the students had used blades and other sharp objects to carve whale-like shapes into their arms – a tell-tale sign of the Russia-born self-harm game that has claimed hundreds of lives across the world. The children have been sent for counseling. “They were playing a local adaptation of the Blue Whale game. They thought the game would help them solve their personal problems. It was acting as some sort of faith healing,” said Pallav.

This is the latest in a string of cases reported from across India of deaths or suicide attempts linked to the online game.

Last month, a 19-year-old student was found hanging from the ceiling fan in Tamil Nadu’s Madurai as part of the game, where players are asked to perform 50 increasing­ly difficult tasks of self-harm culminatin­g in a suicide bid. Each task must be filmed and shared as “proof”. The tasks range from self-harming, watching scary movies to waking up at unusual hours.

The government has issued an advisory and police teams across states are working with schools to counsel teenagers and wean them away from the online game.

But the increasing penetratio­n of mobile phones and growing curiosity of teenagers has proved to be a difficult challenge for authoritie­s.

Police said the game appeared to have reached the desolate district, one of the poorest in the country and roiled by insurgent violence, about two months ago. Authoritie­s are now talking to the students’ parents and searching their homes for more clues.

“One child said if he played the game, his father would leave alcohol, another said he wanted to stop his father from forcibly marrying him. They must have come to know about the game through the newspaper or internet. It seems that one child is guiding others about game,” Pallav told Hindustan Times. Police have now ordered a thorough search of other schools in the region.

THE TASKS RANGE FROM SELFHARMIN­G, WATCHING SCARY MOVIES TO WAKING UP AT UNUSUAL HOURS

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