Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

How Jaswanti kept her misdeeds secret CLOSELY GUARDED

No inmate was allowed to go out of the complex even for a short while and hence tales of horror never went out; accused used her influence among cops, politician­s

- Vivek Gupta Vivek.gupta@hindustant­imes.com ■

PANCHKULA: Apna Ghar in-charge Jaswanti Devi, 53, who was awarded life imprisonme­nt on Friday along with two others for sexual exploitati­on of inmates, could manage to unleash a reign of terror and yet keep it secret by cutting the inmates from the outer world.

Besides, she used her influence among police officers and politician­s to keep her misdeeds under wraps, something which the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) failed to probe.

Inspection reports of the National Council for the Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) that exposed her crime during its raid on the shelter home on May 9, 2012 revealed that all inmates in were scared of her.

No inmate was allowed to go out of the complex even for a short while and hence tales of horror never went out.

The children were not allowed to go to the neighbourh­ood day school. Due to lack of interactio­n with the outside world, the stories never went out.

The NCPCR report stated that most of the older inmates were either destitute or without any support, hence no one could gather courage to tell any visitor about the wrong happenings at the home.

The report added that police officers, especially SHO of Gandhi Camp, was reported to be a frequent visitor, and presuming Jaswanti’s police connection­s, the inmates felt too scary to inform anybody about their being wronged at the home.

Former NCPCR member Vinod Kumar Tikoo, who headed the raid at Apna Ghar on the night of May 9 in 2012, said that it was failure on the part of CBI not to prosecute any police official helping Jaswanti in her crime, despite several victims giving their statements in this regard.

Whenever a government official or celebrity visited the home, the presentati­on was manipulate­d in such a manner so that they did not get to interact with the children without being accompanie­d by Jaswanti, Jai Bhagwan or any other staff from the home, the NCPCR report said.

The report said the pictures of Jaswanti Devi with politician­s and senior officials, which were hanging in her shelter home, showed that a lot of important people visited the centre. But before the visit of high profile people, the inmates were always threatened not to talk to any outsider about any punishment­s or complain on any other matter including food, clothes, education etc, it added.

Recalling the raid, Tikoo said that they kept their raid secret and informed top district officials of their visit just before reaching Rohtak. “Jaswanti came to know of about the visit before we came here.

However, she had a very less time to make cosmetic arrangemen­ts,” he said

SIT HEAD HAILS VERDICT

Advocate Anil Malhotra, who headed the high court-appointed special investigat­ion team (SIT) and on whose report the case was handed over to the CBI, said the punishment was commensura­te to the gravity of the heinous offences committed by the accused.

“The government machinery must carry out stringent checks to prevent such abuses of children in care homes,” Malhotra said.

Tikoo said that it was a satisfying verdict and surely create a deterrent but it should have been concluded much earlier so that victims involved in this case could not suffer mentally and physically during the long period of trial.

 ??  ?? ■ The children at Apna Ghar (above) in Rohtak were not even allowed to go to a neighbourh­ood school. HT FILE
■ The children at Apna Ghar (above) in Rohtak were not even allowed to go to a neighbourh­ood school. HT FILE

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