Millennium Post

NCPCR inquires about safety measures in school buses

- ABHAY SINGH

NEW DELHI: If the school bus has a first aid box or a facility of drinking water, was among the few questions which were included in the set of 56 questions which was asked from schools in the Capital by National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR). The move aims at checking whether the schools are providing proper safety and security to children inside the school buses.

The official from NCPCR told that they are checking the implementa­tion of the guidelines by the Supreme Court for transporta­tion of school students. ''We have asked State Commission for Protection of Child Rights (SCPCR) to check the implementa­tion of the guidelines in school buses in the Capital,” said NCPCR official.

Not only in Delhi but they also sent the questionna­ire in other states and also conducted the workshop in one state where they met parents, students, teachers, drivers and the conductors whether they have found negligence and summoned two officials from

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Uttar Pradesh.

Priyank Kanoongo from NCPCR said that they are taking every possible step for the safety of the children for which they have been monitoring the situation of transporta­tion for the children. “If the negligence found, action will be taken,” he said.

Sources claimed that in the workshop, many of the bus drivers and conductors were not aware of the safety and security of the children inside the bus.

NCPCR has been getting the complaints where the school and bus drivers have been playing with the safety of the children. The questionna­ire which is with the

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stated that whether the school authority took periodic feedback from the school children using school transport facility with regards to the driver, conductors being taken on the records of same being kept.

The commission had also focused on checking the background of the bus drivers and the conductors whether they have involved in any criminal case or not in past. The child rights' body has investigat­ed that the number of private schools which gave transport facility to the children is high in comparisio­n to government schools so to avoid any negligence, the commission is regularly monitoring the situation. “We have received the report of the schools which will be analysed,” said the NCPCR official.

The commission had also asked schools whether the school bus were having two fire extinguish­ers of five kilograms capacity with ISI mark and whether the driver, conductor and woman guard have been provided training about how to use them. The child rights' body has also asked schools about the design of the school bus like windows. NEW DELHI: The death toll in Bara Hindu Rao cylinder fire incident has reached 4 after another woman Preeti succumbed to her injuries in the Delhi hospital.

Seven-year-old girl Vanshika already succumbed to burn injuries along with her sister Kavya. Though fiveyear-old Kavya and her grandmothe­r Bhagwati Devi died on the day of the blast which took place on Saturday.

The incident occurred when a housewife Preeti was making tea early morning at around 8: 55 am on Saturday. It was then the leakage in LPG gas started and soon as she lighted the gas stove it caught fire. As the fire spread in the room Bhagwati Devi, a 75-year-old woman and the mother in law of Preeti who was lying close was charred. In an attempt to save her, son Vijay, 35, wife Preeti and their two daughters Kavya and Vanshika aged 5 and 7 years respective­ly received severe burn injuries. Three others are still injured in the incident.

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