The Hindu (Madurai)

How is bringing schoolchil­dren to PM’s roadshow a criminal offence, asks Madras High Court

- Mohamed Imranullah S.

The Madras High Court on Thursday directed the Coimbatore city police to explain by Monday how the mere presence of schoolchil­dren in uniform during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s roadshow on March 18 necessitat­es registrati­on of a criminal case against the school management.

Justice G. Jayachandr­an posed multiple questions to the prosecutio­n during the hearing of a petition filed by the headmistre­ss of a middle school to quash a First Informatio­n Report (FIR) registered on March 19 on the basis of a complaint lodged by District

Child Protection Officer Pavithra Devi.

The judge primarily wanted to know how Section 75 of the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015, which deals with assaulting, abandoning, abusing, exposing or wilfully neglecting children in a manner likely to cause mental or physical suffering, would get attracted in the present case.

A law officer replied that the school management had “exposed” 32 students to unnecessar­y mental and physical suffering by taking them to watch the roadshow in a crowded place, just because there was a delay on the part of their parents in coming to school to pick them up.

However, the judge wondered whether the criminal case could be filed solely at the instance of the District Child Protection Officer, who came to know about it only through media reports.

He pointed out that none of the parents appeared to have lodged any complaint. Further, no untoward incident had been reported at the roadshow, the judge said, and cautioned the police against being carried away by media reports.

When the law officer said an Assistant Returning Officer too had reported the incident, since the model code of conduct had come into force on March 18, the judge said the children had not been used for any election campaign, and they had simply watched a roadshow. He said the decision to be taken in the present case would have a largescale bearing on similar issues touching upon the presence of children in political events and asked the law officer to come prepared with case laws to argue the matter on Monday.

He also extended, until further orders, the interim protection granted to the school management by Justice N. Anand Venkatesh last week by directing the police not to take any coercive action.

 ?? ?? In the instant case, the children had not been used for any election campaign, and had simply watched a roadshow, the judge said.
In the instant case, the children had not been used for any election campaign, and had simply watched a roadshow, the judge said.

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