The Free Press Journal

Crime against children up by 300% in recent years: NCPCR chairperso­n

- AGENCIES

Stating that the crimes against children in India have increased by almost 300 per cent in a span of six years since 2009, National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) Chairperso­n Stuti Kacker on Saturday said a multi-sectoral action plan is needed to combat child traffickin­g.

“The National Crime Record Bureau suggests that there is a rise in crime against children since 2009. The number of incidents rose from 24,203 in 2009 to 92,172 in 2015, resulting a increase of almost 300 percent in a span of six years,” Kacker said in a written statement read out in absentia at the ‘Anti-Human Traffickin­g’ conference here organised by Kolkata Mary Ward Social Centre.

“The deeper analysis shows that in crime rate a substantia­l increase has taken place between 2009 and 2015 due to marriage of minor girls, kidnapping and abduction and selling of minors for prostituti­on,” she said.

Kacker also revealed that the number of traffickin­g victims among children have also significan­tly increased in recent years.

“NCRB data suggest that a total of 9,104 children were trafficked in 2015 which is a 27 percent increase over 2014. This includes both traffickin­g within the country and cross border traffickin­g. The estimate indicates that over 60 per cent of total human traffickin­g is of the children,” she said.

Kacker suggested an action plan in the country to address issues like poverty, unemployme­nt and economic and gender disparity that are major reasons of any form of human traffickin­g.

“The causes of global child traffickin­g are varied and complex but it includes poverty, lack of opportunit­y, economic disparity, land demarcatio­n, increased gender discrimina­tion and discrimina­tory cultural practices,” she said.

“We need to protect our children from violence and crime to identify and close the gap that enables the trafficker­s a scope and formulate a multi sectoral action plan for combating child traffickin­g,” she added.

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