
Teacher booked for ‘sodomising' student: Punjab child rights panel issues notice to Patiala SSP, seeks report by June 13
The commission said that they had taken a suo-motu cognisance of the matter and directed Patiala SSP to thoroughly investigate the case and file an action-taken report in the matter before the commission by June 13.
The commission in its notice to SSP Patiala has stated that the commission is empowered to conduct a suo motu inquiry under Section 13 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012, whenever there were violations of child rights.
'This is a serious issue. We will ensure that the police conduct a fair and speedy investigation into the case. Though the accused is a decorated teacher, we will ensure the rule of law prevails,' said Kanwardeep Singh, chairman, Punjab State Commission for Protection of Child Rights.
When asked about the boy being threatened in the court by an unidentified individual, the chairman said that they would ensure the safety of the victim.
'We will take care of the safety of the victim. Besides, we will look after his mental health also,' said Singh.
The accused teacher is a physical education teacher at Government High School and was booked under Section 6 of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO) Act and 351 (2) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).
Meanwhile, Patiala police said raids were being conducted to nab the accused. The Punjab education department on Monday suspended the accused teacher.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
ED attaches actor Ranya Rao's assets in gold smuggling case: What to know
The Enforcement Directorate (ED) attached assets worth over Rs 34 crore linked to Kannada actor Ranya Rao in a gold smuggling-related money laundering case. On Friday (July 4), the central agency said that false customs declarations were filed in Dubai — where Rao had a travel history — declaring the destination of gold shipments as Switzerland or the US, but in fact, it was for India. 'The attachments have been made in terms of Section 5(1) of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act as property equivalent in value to the untraced proceeds of crime identified during the course of investigation,' the ED said. On March 3, the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) arrested Rao at the Bengaluru airport on her arrival from Dubai and recovered 14.2 kg of gold bars valued at more than Rs 12.56 crore from her possession. On March 9, the DRI arrested Telugu actor Tarun Konduru, Rao's accomplice. The ED said, 'Ranya Rao, in active collusion with Tarun Konduru Raju and others, orchestrated a well-structured operation for smuggling gold into India. Gold was procured from suppliers based in Dubai, Uganda, and other jurisdictions, and payments were made through hawala channels in cash, thereby circumventing legal financial systems.' The probe revealed that the smuggled gold was then sold in India to jewellers and other local entities, and the proceeds were laundered through hawala remittances abroad to finance repeat smuggling consignments. Here is what to know. In early March, DRI officials called it 'one of the biggest seizures of gold at Bengaluru airport in recent times.' The DRI was investigating whether the incident was an isolated incident or a part of a series of gold-smuggling trips, noting that Rao, 33, travelled to Dubai 27 times over the previous six months. The case also raised questions on possible police involvement, as local officers would escort Rao home from the airport after she returned from her frequent trips to Dubai. Rao is also the stepdaughter of the senior Karnataka IPS officer K Ramachandra Rao. She is alleged to have used airport protocol services available to her father to escape customs checks and detection at the Bengaluru airport on arrival from Dubai. Earlier this month, the Income Tax (I-T) department said it would investigate Rao's wealth. Until its repeal in 1990, the Gold (Control) Act, 1968, curbed gold imports and heavily restricted the acquisition, possession, and disposal of gold in India. However, with economic liberalisation in the 1990s, the government modified its approach, imposing an import duty on gold at the rate of Rs 250 for every 10 grams, leading to a boom in gold imports in the following years. Gold imports are largely governed by the Customs Act, 1962, and by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC). The customs duty for gold may differ depending on the amount of gold carried by a passenger and the duration spent abroad before travelling back to India, as per the Baggage Rules, 2016 (issued under the Customs Act). Under these rules, a man residing abroad for over a year may carry up to 20 grams of jewellery duty-free (with a value cap of Rs 50,000), and a woman may similarly carry up to 40 grams (with a cap of Rs 1 lakh). The CBIC also has specific guidelines for Indian passengers returning from Dubai after residing there for over six months, allowing them to carry up to 1 kg of gold as long as the applicable customs duty is paid. The customs duty for gold is: 3% customs duty: for men carrying 20-50 grams of gold and women carrying 40-100 grams; 6% customs duty: for men carrying 50-100 grams and women carrying 100-200 grams; 10% customs duty: For men carrying over 100 grams and women carrying over 200 grams. In 2003, the Supreme Court held that any article imported without complying with the relevant conditions or restrictions must be considered a 'prohibited good'. Such goods are liable to be confiscated under Section 111 and punished under Section 112 of the Customs Act. The punishment may include a fine of up to the value of the goods. Section 135 provides a punishment of up to 7 years imprisonment if the market price of the smuggled goods exceeds Rs. 1 lakh. Smuggling is also punishable under Section 111 (Organised Crime) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, which punishes 'trafficking in…illicit goods' with imprisonment of at least five years, extendable to life imprisonment. The Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) also carries the same punishment for smuggling as a 'terrorist act' under Section 15 if it causes 'damage to the monetary stability of India'. This is an updated version of an explainer published earlier this year.


Hindustan Times
3 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Maharashtra to appoint ‘support persons' for victims of child sexual abuse
MUMBAI: The Maharashtra government has decided to provide assistance to victims of child sexual abuse by appointing 'support persons' to render emotional, psychological and legal assistance to them. The support persons will protect the victims and facilitate medical assistance, treatment and counselling for them to overcome their mental trauma. An order to this effect was issued by the state's women and child development department on Friday. child abuse minor rape The government has also decided to implement the model guidelines framed by the National Commission for the Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) to regulate the 'support person' for the child sexual abuse victims. These steps come in the wake of the incident at a top city school where a 16-year-old male student was allegedly sexually taken advantage of by a female teacher for three months in the school and for a year and a quarter after her alleged dismissal. In its verdict of October 2023, the Supreme Court had said that the state was obliged to provide 'support persons' as per the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act 2023 to child victims of sexual offences, emphasising that the appointment of these persons was not optional. The court also said that the option of availability of a support person and the right to claim their assistance should be made known to the victim's parents but the need for such persons should not be left to the discretion of a victim's parents in all cases. While delivering the verdict, it also directed the NCPCR to frame guidelines, which were shared with all the states in August last year. According to the NCPCR guidelines, the trained support persons are expected to protect the victims from external pressure, provide a witness protection scheme, accompany them during statement recording, investigation, medical examination or trial and help them access facilities like education. 'A support person will have to be assigned by a child welfare committee in order to render assistance to the victim throughout the process of investigation and trial or the person who is assisting the victim during the trial under the POCSO Act,' said a senior official from the women and child development department. State woman and child development minister Aditi Tatkare said, 'They will play a crucial role in helping children to cope with the legal system and provide them with the support they require to effectively testify against their offenders.' Who is eligible to be appointed as a support person? Any person who possesses a postgraduate degree in social work, sociology, psychology or child development or a graduate with a minimum of three years' experience in child education and development/ protection issues is eligible. Those actively engaged in the realm of child rights or child protection or officials associated with a children's home or shelter home and responsible for the custody of the children are also eligible to apply for the post.


Hindustan Times
3 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Safety of children online paramount: T'gana CM
Telangana chief minister A Revanth Reddy on Saturday emphasized the importance of protecting children from all kinds of abuse— including sexual abuse and abuse over social media. Gutha Sukender Reddy, Chairman Telangana legislative council welcomes state Chief Minister Revanth Reddy before addressing the council meeting at state Legislative Assembly, in Hyderabad on Saturday. State Congress President Bomma Mahesh Kumar Goud and party council members also present. (Mohammed Aleemuddin) Speaking at the inaugural session of the state-level-meet 2025 on the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (Pocso) Act at Dr Marri Chenna Reddy Human Resource Development Institute in Hyderabad, the chief minister said that child survivors must be made central to the legal and moral framework addressing sexual offences perpetrated against them. 'We have to protect our children from sexual abuse, at any cost and with all means,' said Revanth Reddy. He added that his government was giving top priority to the protection of children and women, saying that Telangana had pioneered child-friendly courts, run by Hyderabad Bharosa Centre. The goal was not just faster case disposal, but total child protection and development, said the chief minister. 'Telangana Bharosa Project has 29 centres. It provides police support, legal aid, medical assistance and counselling in a friendly environment,' he said. Telangana Bharosa centers set up in all the districts of the state are aimed at centralising help and support measures for women and children affected by violence and sexual abuse in order to reduce the risk of re-victimization. Survivors are provided with psychological, legal, medical and rehabilitation support, besides police help and prosecution of the accused. Stating that the Pocso Act and Juvenile Justice Act were highly progressive instruments in the country's legal framework, the chief minister, however, said they had their own problems in implementation. 'We must ensure procedures help child victims, not hurt them. We must also end child pornography, and impose strict punishments,' he said. He called for curbing social media abuse of children and said the perpetrators must be treated without mercy. 'We must ensure justice and compassion for children not only in courts but also at police stations, child centres and in every step of this process,' he said, adding that justice was not just about conviction, but about restoration, about dignity, and reclaiming childhood. Supreme Court judge justice Surya Kant, who is also executive chairman of National Legal Services Authority (NLSA), said the child protection framework in the country remained disjointed and under-equipped and there was a need for a fundamental shift in the system that treated the child not as a passive witness in a criminal trial, but as a person in urgent need of sustained and holistic care. 'The abused children must experience meaningful restorative justice—where the systems meant to protect them do not re-traumatise them. The system should prioritise the healing of children both within and outside the four walls of the courtroom, alongside ensuring accountability,' he said. 'Consider the case of a 10-year-old child made to recount trauma repeatedly—before a teacher, a police officer, a medical examiner, a lawyer, and then a judge. With each retelling, her voice grows fainter until it vanishes altogether,' added justice Kant. Justice Kant observed that the distress of the victim was often compounded by the legal process. 'When the system forgets the child in its pursuit of the accused, it fails them both. He noted that this imbalance was not incidental, but structural,' he said, adding that the healing of an abused child was not just a legal requirement, but also a moral obligation and a Constitutional commitment. He stressed that the task of protecting and supporting child victims was too important to be left to the legal system alone. It was not only the responsibility of the judiciary, police, and social workers—but a collective national duty. Telangana high court acting chief justice Sujoy Paul, senior police officials of the women and child welfare department, legal services experts from UNICEF and other civil society organisations also attended the session.