2025 INSC 482
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
(HON’BLE J.B. PARDIWALA, J. AND
HON’BLE R. MAHADEVAN, JJ.)
PINKI
Appellant
VERSUS
STATE OF UTTAR
PRADESH AND ANR.
Respondent
Criminal Appeal No. 1927 OF 2025 (ARISING
OUT OF SLP (CRL) NO. 4658 OF 2025) With Criminal Appeal No. 1928 /2025 (Arising
Out Of Slp(Crl.) No. 592/2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1929/2025 (Arising Out Of
Slp(Crl.) No. 590/2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1930 /2025 (Arising Out Of Slp
(Crl.) 4660 / 2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1931 /2025 (Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.)
4661 / 2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1932 /2025 (Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4662 /
2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1933 /2025 (Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4664 / 2025), Criminal
Appeal No. 1934 /2025 (Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4665 /2025), Criminal Appeal
No. 1935 /2025 (Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4666 Of 2025), Criminal Appeal No.
1936/2025 (Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4667/2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1937 /2025
(Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4668 / 2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1938 /2025
(Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4670 / 2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1939 /2025
(Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4671 / 2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1940 /2025
(Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4672 / 2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1941 /2025
(Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4673 / 2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1942 /2025
(Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4674 / 2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1943 /2025
(Arising Out Of Slp (Crl.) 4675 /2025), Criminal Appeal No. 1944 /2025 (Arising
out of SLP (CRL.) 4676 / 2025)-Decided on 15-04-2025
Criminal,
Bail
Criminal Procedure
Code, 1973, Section 439 – Constitution of India, Article 23 - Bail order –
Challenge as to by victims –
Child trafficking - FIR for the offence
punishable under Sections 363, 311 and 370(5) IPC - High Court while releasing the accused
persons on bail took into consideration the following aspects: -i) The accused
has not been named in the FIR; ii) The name of the accused has been disclosed
by a co-accused; iii) Victim has not been recovered from the custody of the
accused; iv) Similarly situated co-accused has been granted bail; v) No material evidence regarding tampering
of evidence or intimidating of witness in previous criminal cases; vi) Bail is
a rule, jail is an exception – Held that considering the serious nature of the
crime and the modus operandi adopted by the accused persons the High Court
should not have exercised its discretion in favour of the accused persons - The
least that was expected of the High Court while granting bail to all the
accused persons was to impose a condition on each of them to mark their
presence once in a week at the concerned police station so that the police can
keep a check over the movements of all the accused persons - All that the High
Court did was to direct the accused persons to remain present before the trial
court - In none of the impugned orders there is a condition of marking presence
at the concerned police station as a result, the police lost track of all these
accused persons - State did not deem fit to challenge the orders of bail passed
by the High Court and has unfortunately has exhibited no seriousness worth the
name - Impugned orders of bail passed by the High Court liable to be set aside
and further directions issued.
(Para
67, 68, 79 and 80)
JUDGMENT
J. B. Pardiala,
J.:- Leave
granted in all the Special Leave Petitions.
2. Since the issues raised in all
the captioned appeals are identical, those were taken up for hearing
analogously and are being disposed of by this common judgment and order.
3. These appeals arise from
various orders passed by the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad releasing 13
accused persons on bail in connection with FIR No. 201/2023, FIR No. 193/2023,
FIR No. 76/2023, FIR No. 74/2023 and FIR No. 50/2023 respectively registered
for the offence punishable under Sections 363, 311 and 370(5) of the Indian Penal
Code (for short, the "IPC").
4. These appeals have been filed
by the victims of the crime, more particularly the kith and kin of the children
who came to be trafficked, praying for cancellation of bail granted by the High
Court to the 13 accused persons referred to above. In all these appeals the
respondent no. 2 is the particular original accused.
5. Although notice has been
served to each of the accused persons, yet only three accused, namely, Santosh
Sao, Jagveer Baranwal & Manish Jain appeared before this Court for the
purpose of opposing the plea for cancellation of bail. The others have thought
fit not to appear either in person or through an advocate, to oppose these
appeals seeking cancellation of bail.
6. We take notice of the fact
that upon completion of investigation of all the three First Information
Reports referred to above, chargesheets came to be filed in the Court of
Special Chief Judicial Magistrate District Varanasi, Additional Chief Judicial
Magistrate Court No. 5 District Varanasi and Chief Judicial Magistrate District
Varanasi respectively.
7. The criminal cases, as on
date, are pending for committal to the Court of Sessions. We also take notice
of the fact that many of the accused persons, after being released on bail,
have absconded and their whereabouts are not known to the police.
A. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
8. Before we proceed further, we
must give a fair idea as regards the three FIRs.
i. FIR No. 193/2023 (in Sanjay v.
State of Uttar Pradesh and Anr.).
a) The
present case pertains to an interstate child-trafficking racket which profits
from kidnapping, buying and selling of minor children, especially those
children who come from an impoverished background. The appellant, Sanjay is a
rag picker residing in Varanasi. He was sleeping on the pavement with his wife
and four-year-old son, Rohit. On the morning of 15.05.2023, they woke up to
find that their son was missing. Initially, the police report indicated that
the complaint filed by the appellant was one of a missing child, however,
further investigation revealed that the case was one of child-trafficking as
detailed in the Memo of Recovery in 193/2023 as follows:
"Today
on 21/05/2023, I, Inspector incharge, Ramakant Dube with my companion SI
Prakash Singh, SI Prabhakar Singh, SI Shivam Shrivastav, Constable Mrityunjay
Prasad, Constable Shivnand in Government Jeep No. UP 65 AG 0882 with driver
constable Mahender Patel, departed from Police Station for prevention of crime,
night patrolling in search of wanted criminals, were present at the Kamachha
crossing. That we received an information via an informer that the video
regarding child kidnapping which was viral on social media, a person involved
in kidnapping of the said child is heading towards garbage place on the way of
Nawab Gan and could be caught if immediate action is taken. Believing this
information, informed the fellow officials about this and after proper search
of each other, reached the garbage place along with the informer and hidden
ourselves behind garbage place and started waiting for the arrival of that man.
After some time, a person was seen coming from the Ujala Hospital side. The
informer pointed towards this man saying that he is the man who has stolen the
child and went away from there. We police officials were waiting for that
person to come closer. On coming more closer, we caught him immediately using
all the necessary force. The caught person after being searched and enquired
about his name and address stated his name as Santosh Gupta son ofTulsi Gupta resident
ofSinduriya Pokhari Shivdaspur, Police Station Manduadih, age 42 years. When he
was searched, then a Samsung keypad mobile no. 9260964142, IMEI
357116099227517/ 357117099227515 was found from right pocket of his pant and
two notes of 50-50 rupees each were found from left pocket of his pant. On
strict interrogation he stated that we have a gang. We steal small children and
sell them in Rajasthan, Bihar, Jharkhand to childless couples with the help of
our agents for two lakhs to ten lakhs and the amount received in equally
distributed among us. On 14/05/2023 night at about 03:00 o 'clock I and my
accomplice Vinay Kumar Mishra son of late Rajesh Kumar Mishra resident of
Sinduriya Pokhari, Police Station Manduadih, Varanasi stole a 4 year child
sleeping in with a husband-wife on the road near Ram Chander Shukla crossing,
took him in an Ertiga car vehicle no. UP 65 ER 5183 and kept him with my
accomplice Sikha Modanwal wife of Sanjay Modanwal resident of Sinduriya,
Shivdaspur, Manduadih Varanasi. We sell them with the help of agents who are
already connected with us. I have sent the Ertiga Car vehicle No. UP 65 ER 5183
to Rajasthan to sell the child. I have removed the vest of the child whom we
stole from Ram Chandra Shukla crossing and has kept it at my house and kept him
with Shikha making him wear other clothes. Then we kept the child with our
companions Mahesh Rana resident of District Kodarma, Jharkhand, Yashoda Devi
wife of Mukesh Pandit resident of District Hazaribagh, Jharkhand, Sunita Devi
wife of Mahesh Rana District Giridih Jharkhand and Mukesh Pandit, who help me
to steal and sell the children and my son Shivam Gupta used to be with us in
stealing and selling the children. Few days ago, we stole a Small Girl from
Chowkaghat, a boy from under Alopibagh Over bridge, a boy and a girl from near
Vindhyachal Station and a small boy from Nadesar and a small girl from Nagwa
Lanka and sold them with help of my accomplices. Two children out of these were
sold to Manish Jain, Paras, Ghanshyam and Jagbir Baranwal at Jaipur. Rest of
the children have been sold to Sunita Devi, Yashoda Pandit, Mahesh Rana
resident ofKoderma, Mukesh Mandit and Mahesh Rana residents Giridih. I can get
the vest of child, who was stolen by us from Ram Chander Shukla crossing,
recovered from my home. Thereafter with the hope of recovery of the clothes of
kidnapped child, we went to the house of the accused with the police force. The
accused going ahead gave a dusty white colored vest near the cupboard, on the
neck and arm of which, a black band was available and he stated it to be the
vest of the same child whom they stole on 14/05/2023. In the meantime, the
complainant along with his wife arrived there and after looking at the vest,
stated that this vest belongs to my son Rohit. He was wearing this same vest
when he was stolen. The above-mentioned Vest was taken into police custody and
kept with mobile in a plastic box and sealed and the currency notes recovered
while searching were kept in an envelope and sealed. The accused was informed
about his act as a crime under sections 363, 311 of IPC and he was taken into
police custody at 4:00 o 'clock. The orders and directions of Supreme Court and
National Human Rights commissions were strictly obeyed during arrest and
recovery. The memo was prepared on directions of me the inspector in the light
of torch and streetlight by SI Shivam Shrivastav. Arrest memo was prepared on
spot. The information of arrest of the accused was given to his father-in-law
Gopal Shah. Memo is being read over and signatures are being obtained from all
concerned. A copy of memo is being given to the accused. "
b)
There are in all 14 accused persons who have been chargesheeted in connection
with FIR No. 193/2023 registered with P.S. Bhelupur, Varanasi referred to
above. Out of the 14 accused persons, the bail of 5 accused persons have
already been cancelled by this Court.
c) The
chargesheet came to be filed against the accused persons on 17.07.2023 for the
offence punishable under Sections 363, 311, 370(5) of the IPC. However, the
charges are yet to be framed on account of the persistent failure on part of
the accused persons in to appear before the concerned trial court.
d) The
High Court had granted bail to several accused persons, namely Sunita Devi,
Gudiya Devi, Manish Jain, Mahesh Rana s/o Ramlal Rana, Sangeeta Devi, Anuradha
Devi and Santosh Sao, vide orders dated 12.12.2023, 04.10.2023, 21.11.2023,
08.11.2023, 15.12.2023, 15.12.2023, 09.11.2023, respectively, which were
challenged before this Court vide SLP (Crl.) Nos. 1041-1047/2024. Subsequently,
vide order dated 24.09.2024, this Court was pleased to set-aside the orders
granting bail to the accused persons in SLP (Crl.) No. 1041, 1042, 1044, 1045
and 1046/2024 respectively, with the direction to the accused persons to
surrender forthwith. The Special Leave Petition bearing SLP (Crl.) No.
1043/2024 (R2- Manish Jain) and Criminal Appeal bearing CRL.A. No. 4002/2024
arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 1047/2024 (R2-Santosh Sao) are before us for consideration.
Since the accused persons in SLP (Crl.) No. 1041, 1042, 1044, 1045 and
1046/2024 respectively, failed to surrender and no action was taken by the
police in furtherance to the aforesaid order, a Miscellaneous Application
bearing No.309/2025 came to be filed seeking appropriate directions to the
State Police machinery to file a status report. It was only after this Court
directed the respondent State to file an affidavit indicating the steps taken
to comply with the aforesaid order, that the necessary action was taken to
arrest the accused persons. They were arrested after more than five months from
the passing of the order. It is pertinent to mention that the accused persons
failed to surrender despite non-bailable warrants (for short, "NBW")
being issued against them from the Court of the CJM, Varanasi. As per the
status report filed by the State, five accused persons, namely, Sunita Devi,
Gudiya Devi, Mahesh Rana s/o Ramlal Rana, Sangeeta Devi and Anuradha Devi have
been arrested.
ii. FIR No. 50/2023 (in Samsher
Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh and Anr.)
a) The
present case also pertains to the interstate child-trafficking racket which is
alleged to have been run by the same accused persons against whom FIR No.
193/2023 was registered at P.S. Bhelupur, Varanasi. During the police
investigation of FIR No. 193/2023, the present FIR No. 50/2023 came into the
light. The appellant, Samsher Singh is a labourer who makes his living while
taking shelter on the streets under Andhrapul Bridge in Varanasi. On
28.03.2023, his one-year-old daughter, Mohini, was kidnapped and upon realizing
the same, the appellant and his wife started searching for their child
frantically but were unable to locate her. Desperate and with no leads, the
appellant filed a police complaint on 29.05.2023 at P.S. Chetganj, Varanasi.
b)
There are 7 accused persons who have been chargesheeted in FIR No. 50/2023
registered at P.S. Chetganj, Varanasi. Out of the 7 accused persons, the bail
orders passed by the High Court of 3 accused persons are under challenge before
us.
c) The
chargesheet came to be filed against the accused persons on 16.09.2023 for the
offence punishable under Sections 363,311 and 370 of the IPC. Thereafter,
supplementary chargesheets dated 19.03.2024, 05.06.2024 and 12.08.2024
respectively, came to be filed under Sections 363, 311 and 370 of the IPC
respectively. However, the charges are yet to be framed on account of
nonappearance of the accused persons before the court concerned.
d) It
is only after the intervention of this Court that the child was traced and
found on 20.03.2025 from the custody of accused Anil Prasad Baranwal, R/o
Krishna Nagar, Kolkata, West Bengal.
iii. FIR No. 201/2023 (in Pinki
v. State of Uttar Pradesh and Anr.).
a) The
present case also pertains to the interstate child-trafficking racket which is
run by the same accused persons against whom FIR No. 193/2023 was registered at
P.S. Bhelupur, Varanasi. During the police investigation of FIR No. 193/2023,
it was revealed that the present FIR No. 201/2023 had been registered at P.S.
Cantt., Varanasi against the gang members of the same child trafficking racket.
On 29.04.2023, Smt. Pinki's one-year-old child, Bahubali, was kidnapped from
Nadesar Cantt., Varanasi while the minor boy-child was sleeping beside the
appellant (Smt. Pinki), by the same members of the organized interstate
child-trafficking ring. Upon discovering that her son went missing at 2:30AM,
the appellant filed a police complaint the following day at P.S. Cantt.,
Varanasi, leading to the registration of FIR No. 201/2023 dated 30.04.2023.
Initially, the police report indicated that the complaint filed by the
appellant was one of a missing children, however, further investigation
revealed that the case was one of child-trafficking as detailed in the Memo of
Recovery in FIR No. 201/2023 as follows:
"Today
on 02/06/2023,I SI Saurabh Pandey along with my companion SI Vaibhav Shukla,
Constable Anuj Kushvaha and Lady Constable Rubi Singh, departed from Police
Station Cantt, Commissionerate Varanasi on dated 29/05/23 via GD 070 for
investigation of present case and in hope of recovery of kidnapped child and
arrest of accused as per the information provided by the accused arrested in
FIR no. 193/23 Under Section 363/177/370(5) IPC namely Shikha Gupta and Manish
Kumar Jain etc, for searching and clue, reached at Police Station Chandwara,
District Kodarma, Jharkhand on 30/05/2023 and with the help of local police
were busy in attempt to recovery of child and arrest of accused, then from
Police Station Cantt constable Prem Shankar Patel and SI Anand Chaurasiya,
Constable Sachin Singh, Constable Sumit Sahi Police Station Bhelupur,
Commissionerate Varanasi and SI Ram Upadhyay, Constable Ejaz Hussain Police
Station Chetganj, Commissionerate Varanasi met us at Chandwara Highway in
search of kidnapped children and in search of clue. At that time from Prayagraj
Police SI Pavan Kumar Singh with his companions SI Vikas Yadav with SOG SI
Dinesh Singh, Constable Rakesh Dube, Constable Piyush Vajpeyi, Driver Manoj
Kumar Singh in vehicle no. UP70AG2572, with team in search of child Shani Bind
related to FIR no. 76/23 under Section 363 IPC Police Station Daraganj,
Commissionerate Prayagraj, met with us. There only, Inspector Madhav from
Mirzapur police along with Head Constable Lal ji Yadav, Constable Brij Kishore
Sharma, SI Daya Shankar Ojha, lady Constable Raksha Yadav, Driver Constable
Prabhu Narayan with vehicle UP 32 BG 7504 in FIR no. 74/23 Under Section 363
IPC Police Station Vindhyachal, District Mirzapur for searching the kidnapped
child Kajal, met with us. We all police officials after sharing the information
about kidnapped children and arrest of accused, with the help of Chanwara
Police, for searching of kidnapped children and arrest of accused, were present
at highway. Then an informer came and told us thatAnuradha Nurse, you are
searching for, is present at highway in front of Global Nursing home for going
somewhere, if you move immediately then she might be caught. On believing this
information, after joint planning, we all police officials moved ahead with
informer. On highway only, signalling towards a lady, the informer told that
she is Anuradha Nurse whom you are searching and then the informer went away
from there. Then we police officials went ahead towards that lady. That lady
was enquired about her name and address with the help of lady constable Rubi
Singh and also was searched. Then she stated her name as Anuradha Devi wife
ofYogender Singh aged 37 years resident of Village and Post Office Lupung,
Police Station Katkam Sandi, District Hazaribagh, Jharkhand. While searching
two android mobile were found from her left hand (1) Oppo CPH2269, IMEI No.
86205005576687J/S62050055766881 and (2) Samsung SM-GEIOF, IMEI-
358972081446914/358973081446912 were recovered. Informing about the
above-mentioned incident, questions were asked from above mentioned Anuradha,
then she told that I have purchased many children through Madan Baranwal,
Manish Jain, Jagvir Baranwal, Ghanshyam and Gudiya and sold ahead. Then I, the
SI, asked her about the child who was stolen from Nadesar Cantt after showing
his picture in the mobile then she said that this one year baby was sold to me
by Jagvir in 2.5 Lakh rupees. I have sold this child further in 3.5 lakh
through Kuldeep Paswan resident ofMarkacho to his some known one. After that
the picture of the child stolen from Prayagraj was shown to Anuradha and she
replied that she had sold this child to Santosh Sao of Majhgawan and still the
child is with him. Thereafter Bhelupur police and SI Ram Upadhyay asked her
about the girl child stolen from Choukaghat, Varanasi, then she said that about
this girl, only Madan Baranwal can tell you about this child who is the
relative of Jagvir and Manish Jain. After that the Mirzapur police showed the
picture of the girl child kidnapped from their area and enquired about her,
then Anuradha said that Jagvir and Gudia had sold a four-five years old child
to her in 45 thousand rupees and she sold her to Sangeeta wife of Tulsi Rana
resident of Pogdanda working at Health sub center. I was involved in the
purchase and sale of many other children. I can get recovered the children kept
with Santosh and Sangeeta and can get Jagvir and Gudia arrested. Thereafter,
after keeping Anuradha under supervision, we reached the place told by her at
Manjhgawa at the house of Santosh Sav where Anuradha signalled towards a person
who was carrying a child and told that this is the same child who was stolen
from Prayagraj. On this we police officials enquired about the child from
Santosh Sav through different questions. He stated his name as Santosh Sav son
ofBihari Sav aged 37 years, resident of Manjhgawa, Post Office Kako, Police
Station Tilaiya Dam, District Kodarma, Jharkhand and when he was asked about
the child strictly then he stated that he purchased the child for Rs. 4 lakh
from that Anuradha who has come with you. Thereafter SI Pavan Kumar Singh sent
the photo of child to her parents and got the child identified through video
call from his father Vishnu Bind where he identified the child as his son Shani
Nishad and the child also started weeping after getting emotional while seeing
his parents on video call. Thereafter the child was taken in security by
Constable Piyush Vajpeyi and Santosh Sav was kept in supervision of Constable
Rakesh. We police officials moved ahead with all of them. Anuradha further
informed that the baby of Vindhyachal is still with Sangeeta Devi. On believing
her, we departed for the village of Sangeeta Devi namely Pogdanda. Outside of
village only we saw a lady carrying a child in her lap. Signalling towards her
Anuradha told that she is Sangeeta and the same child, about whom she was
telling about. Thereafter, that lady was asked about her name and address and
about that child with the help of Lady Constable Raksha Yadav. She told that my
name is Sangeeta Devi wife of Tulsi Ram, age 34 years, resident of Village
Pogdanda, Police Station Jainagar, District Kodarma. A mobile from her left
hand Samsung Galaxy MOIS, IMEI 356148114500231/ 356149114500239, Mobile No.
990595469 was recovered. On being enquired about the child, she stated that she
had purchased the child for Rs. 55 thousand from the same Anuradha who was with
us and now I was going to searching a customer for selling the child while you
caught me. Thereafter, the recovered child was handed over in security of
Constable Prem Shankar Patel andSangeeta Sao was handed over in the monitoring
of lady constable Raksha Yadav and departed in search for the house of Gudiya
as per the information given by Anuradha and after informing Police Station
Tilaiya, reached the house of Gudiya at Gandhi School Road, Tilaiya, Kodarma.
Where she was found present. She was brought with lady constable Rubi Singh
after informing Police Station Tilaiya, we departed towards Police Station
Chandwara. We reached near Chandwara Police Station, a person was walking on
the road, signaling towards whom Anuradha said that he is Jagvir about whom I
was telling. Thereafter that person was stopped by us and he was told about the
incident and inquired. Then that person was shocked on seeing Anuradha, Gudiya,
Sangeeta and recovered children and accepted his mistake and apologized for his
mistake and told that my name is Jagvir Baranwal son ofSahdev Modi, aged 41
years resident of village Mahugai, Post Office and Police Station Chandwara,
District Kodarma, Jharkhand. One of my relatives is Manish Kumar Jain resident
of Jaipur, through him I came into contact with a lady from Banaras namely
Shikha Gupta who with the help of her companions Vinay, Tannu and Santosh steal
children and used to give to me and I with the help of Gudiya and Anuradha sell
them after finding customers. Thereafter Jagvir Baranwal was searched and from
his right hand a Galaxy A 30S, IMEI 35857711144744/ 358578101144742 android was
found. Then Gudiya, who was with us, apologized stating that she knew Madan
Baranwal, Jagvir Baranwal, Manish Jain and Anuradha for a long time and I help
to sell children with help of them and I receive commission for that. My name
is Gudiya Devi wife of Sakal Dev Yadav, age 30 years, resident of Gandhi School
Road, Tilaiya, Kodarma. Sir, I also have a keypad mobile, I am giving the same
to you. When keypad mobile was seen, it was of blue colour NOKIA keypad mobile
IMEI of which is 357749105458963. Santosh Sao who was present with us also
recovered a keypad mobile. When it was seen, it was found black colour Itel
Mobile, the IMEI of which is 357278443860326/ 357278443860334. The accused
present on spot Jagvir Baranwal and Santosh Sav above mentioned and accused
Anuradha Devi, Sangeeta Devi and Gudiya Devi above said were told about the
sections 363/311/370 IPC and taken into police custody at 11:05 hrs. During the
arrest and recovery of children, people were gathered there who were told for
witness but in fear of evil and good, they went away from there. The orders and
directions of Supreme Court and Human Rights commissions were obeyed. Memo of
recovery and arrest was prepared on spot and was read over and signature are
being obtained and recovered mobiles phones were sealed and stamped.
Information of arrest will be given to the family members through proper
channel. A copy of memo for accused is being given to Jagvir Baranwal with
their consent."
b)
There are ten accused persons who have been charge-sheeted in connection with
FIR No. 201/2023 registered at P.S. Cantt., Varanasi. Out of the ten accused
persons, the bail orders of three accused persons have been cancelled by this
Court in proceedings arising out of FIR No. 193/2023. The legality and validity
of the bail orders passed by the High Court as regards six co-accused is now
falling for our consideration.
c) The
chargesheet came to be filed against the accused persons on 07.09.2023 for the
offence punishable under Sections 363, 311 & 370(5) of IPC respectively.
However, the charges are yet to be framed on account of non-appearance of the
accused persons before the court concerned.
9. The details of the committal court
proceedings as regards the aforementioned three FIRs are as follows:
"i.
FIR No. 193/2023
Before
Special CJM, District Varanasi
Criminal
Case No. 93745/2023
Cause
Title: State v. Anuradha Devi & Ors.
Stage:
For Committal
NDOH:
21.04.2025.
ii. FIR
No. 50/2023
Before
Additional CJM, Court No. 5, District Varanasi
Criminal
Case No. 113651/2023
Cause
Title: State v. Manish Jain & Ors.
Stage:
For committal
NDOH: 01.04.2025
iii.
FIR No. 201/2023
Before
CJM, District Varanasi
Criminal
Case No. 118963/2023
Cause
Title: State v. Kuldeep Paswan @ Kuldeep Ram & Ors.
Stage:
For committal
NDOH:
03.04.2025"
B. CHILD TRAFFICKING
i. Global Context
10. The UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child, 1989 (CRC), recognises the importance of family and the
importance for a child to grow in a family environment. [Convention on the Rights of the Child arts. 7 & 8, Nov. 20, 1989,
1577 U.N.T.S. 3.] It also casts a duty on the State to ensure that children
should not be separated from their parents against their will except when it is
in the best interests of the child. Adoption is considered an alternate care mechanism for children who are unable
to live with their parents due to various circumstances and adoption is
preferred over institutionalisation.
11. In 1993, The Hague Convention
on Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of Inter-country Adoption[Hague Convention on Protection of Children
and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption, May 29, 1993, 1870
U.N.T.S. 167.] was introduced to have a global regulatory system to ensure
that adoptions take place through a state approved mechanism and inter-country
adoptions take place after exhausting adoption/placement opportunities
domestically. The principle of "subsidiarity" is one of the guiding
principles of this Convention. The States which have signed and ratified these
conventions have also framed domestic regulations conforming to the
International Conventions and created institutions to implement the same.
12. In the year 2000, there was a
global acknowledgement of trafficking in persons was taking diverse forms and
hence, it was collectively decided that studying and recognising the
trafficking processes vis-à-vis the purpose for which such trafficking was
being done, was important. This enabled recognising a pattern used by
traffickers for different end results. In the "Protocol to Prevent,
Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children"
supplementing the UN Convention against Transnational Organised Crime,
"trafficking" has been defined under Article 3 of the Protocol as
follows:
"(a)
"Trafficking in persons" shall mean the recruitment, transportation,
transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of
force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of the
abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving
of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over
another person, for the purpose of exploitation. Exploitation shall include, at
a minimum, the exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of
sexual exploitation, forced labour or services, slavery or practices similar to
slavery, servitude or the removal of organs;
(b) The
consent of a victim of trafficking in persons to the intended exploitation set
forth in subparagraph (a) of this article shall be irrelevant where any of the
means set forth in subparagraph (a) have been used;
(c) The
recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of a child for the
purpose of exploitation shall be considered "trafficking in persons"
even if this does not involve any of the means set forth in subparagraph (a) of
this article;
(d)
"Child" shall mean any person under eighteen years of age. "
13. Over the years, demands for
adoption of children have increased and there is a significant waiting period
for prospective parents to adopt. At any given point in time, there are parents
waiting for at least 3-4 years to adopt. Even after being processed and
children being matched, the necessary verification processes also take a long
time. Such long delays have created an increase in the demand for children who
are declared legally fit for adoptions, and has consequently attracted trafficking
of children for the purpose of adoption.
14. In 2016, in her thematic
report, the UN Special Rapporteur on the sale of children, child prostitution
and child pornography, documented illegal adoptions and concluded that
"adoptions resulting from crimes such as abduction and sale of and
trafficking in children, fraud in the declaration of adaptability,
falsification of official documents or coercion, and any illicit activity or
practice, such as lack of proper consent by biological parents, improper financial
gain by intermediaries and related corruption, constitute illegal adoptions and
must be prohibited, criminalised and sanctioned as such".[Report of the Special Rapporteur on the
Sale of Children, Child Prostitution and Child Pornography, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/34/55
(Dec. 22, 2016).] The Report documents demand for children as a major
enabling factor for the criminal networks to engage in large scale abduction
and sale of children.
15. There is global recognition
for the duality of the crime committed during the course of illegal adoption,
namely, illegal adoption where the parent has participated in the commercial
transaction of transferring custody of the child or cases where the parent does
not have any financial gain but the adoption itself is illegal.
16. There are sporadic reports of
cases of kidnapping for placing children in adoption. A documentary filmmaker
has written about cases in China where children went missing/were kidnapped and
placed in adoptions in the United States.
[Charlie Custer, Kidnapped and Sold: Inside the Dark World of Child Trafficking
in China, The Atlantic (July 25, 2013).] There are various reports of
Ukrainian children being kidnapped and placed in Russia and Guatemalan children
kidnapped and placed in illegal adoptions abroad.
ii. Child Trafficking in India
17. Article 23 of the
Constitution of India recognises trafficking and prohibits the same. Article 23
reads thus:
"23.
Prohibition of traffic in human beings and forced labour.
1.Traffic
in human beings and begar and other similar forms of forced labour are
prohibited and any contravention of this provision shall be an offence
punishable in accordance with law.
2.
Nothing in this article shall prevent the State from imposing compulsory
service for public purposes, and in imposing such service the State shall not
make any discrimination on grounds only of religion, race, caste or class or
any of them. "
18. The identification of forced
labour, specifically in 1950 indicates that at that time, trafficking was
confined to certain forms. Trafficking in Persons (for short, "TIP")
in India has taken diverse forms and almost each of them is prevalent across
the country. An overall analysis of trafficking patterns across states
reiterates the prevalence of trafficking in large numbers with the number of
cases sharply rising with time. What is of concern is the rapid spread of the
problem with previously unknown factors getting embedded in the web of
traffickers. Changing trafficking patterns have brought along changes in the
traffickers, their modus operandi, their manipulation of the victims and their
understanding of the limitations in the criminal justice system. As the
instances shared hereinabove indicate, the traffickers are operating with
impunity and have deftly adapted to the advances in technology using it to
their benefit.
19. Following the definition in
the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially
Women and Children supplementing the UN Convention against Transnational
Organised Crime and after signing and ratifying, Indian government adapted by
way of an amendment in 2013 to the Penal Code added Sections 370 and 370A of
the Indian Penal Code. Subsequently, the enactment of the new criminal laws
essentially replicated the same provisions that were existing as Section 370
and 370A of the IPC respectively into Section 143 and 144 BNS respectively.
20. Trafficking in persons now is
more expansively defined. In addition to the conventional understanding of
trafficking being synonymous to sex trafficking and forced labour, trafficking
includes other forms as long as there is "recruitment, transportation,
transfer, harbouring or receipt of person" for the purposes of
exploitation using threat, using force, forms of coercion, abduction, fraud,
deceit, abuse of power or vulnerability or consideration to get consent. The
definition is inclusive in nature giving room for emerging forms of
exploitation to be included as TIP. Consequently, an exercise to understand the
expanse of trafficking needs to intrinsically examine the means of the process
of engagement without getting limited to the form.
21. In the present child
kidnapping racket, the traffickers are well networked through their smartphones
sharing information, photographs, transferring money, sharing locations etc.
Their operations, the relative ease with which they are able to operate and
procure buyers for selling the children outside their states indicate that they
are aware of the technology, they recognise demand, and they recognise the need
to operate as a network.
22. It is critical to note the
number of cases that were tracked in such a short time span. This indicates
that these kidnappings have been taking place in large numbers on a regular
basis and there is an urgent need to consolidate these cases and examine them
to be able to identify patterns.
23. Child selling is not new to
this country. There was a time when children were being sold as part of
inter-country adoptions and this Court had passed detailed judgements
acknowledging the same. This Court in Lakshmi Kant Pandey v. Union of India
reported in (1984) 2 SCC 244 dealt with the issue of malpractices and
trafficking in children in connection with adoption of Indian children by foreigners
and its commercialisation. This Court took note of the fact that large amounts
were being demanded by ill-equipped and sometimes even undesirable
organisations or individuals camouflaging trafficking and sale of children as
inter-country adoption. In order to protect the welfare of children, this
Court, in consultation with several social and child welfare institutions, laid
out a comprehensive framework of normative and procedural safeguards for
regulating inter-country adoption as protection against abuse, maltreatment or
exploitation of children and to secure them a healthy, decent family life.
While formulating standards and procedures, this Court referenced various
relevant laws and policies including Articles 15(3), 24, and 39 of the Indian
Constitution regarding child welfare, and the principles embodied in the U.N.
Declaration on the Rights of the Child (1959). The delineated safeguards
include, amongst several others, the requirement that foreigners wishing to
adopt be sponsored by relevant licensed agencies in their own country, that no
adoption application from a foreigner should be entertained directly by any
adoption agency in India, that agencies working on inter-country adoptions and
licensed by the Government of India must meet certain stipulated criteria and
undertake specific responsibilities in ensuring the safety and wellbeing of
adopted children, and that all inter-country adoption proceedings must be
approved by the local courts.
24. Over the years, human
trafficking has manifested into various forms of exploitation and child
trafficking has increased. It has been documented that children are being
trafficked for:
i)
Sexual exploitation;
ii)
Forced labour;
iii)
Begging and petty crimes;
iv)
Armed conflict;
v)
Child marriage;
vi)
Illegal adoption.
25. Each of the above has further
manifestations within itself. Trafficking for forced criminality is raising at
alarming levels since traffickers have realised the protections offered to
children in the juvenile justice system in many jurisdictions. A protection
mechanism for children is exploited as a safe haven for committing heinous
crimes.
26. Following the judgment in
Lakshmi Kant Pandey (supra) in the year 1990, the Central Adoption Resource
Authority (CARA) was set up by the Government of India to regulate, monitor and
promote adoption of orphaned, abandoned or surrendered children. Initially,
CARA was registered as a Society under the Societies Registration Act, 1860.
Over the years, CARA processes were made an intrinsic part of the Juvenile
Justice system. Through Section 68 of the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection
of Children) Act, 2015 (for short, the "JJ Act, 2015"), CARA attained
the status of a statutory body with the mandate to promote and regulate
adoptions, facilitate interstate adoptions, frame regulations on adoption
related matters and regulate inter-country adoptions.
27. The JJ Act, 2015 is a secular
Act which specifies in Section 58(1) that any person irrespective of religion
can adopt a child. Section 56(3) of the Act states that nothing in this Act
shall apply to adoptions under the Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act (HAMA).
As per Section 56(4) of the JJ Act, 2015, all intercountry adoptions are done
as per the provisions of the Act and the Adoption Regulations framed by CARA.
The categories of children available for adoption are seen from a reading of
Section 38 of the JJ Act, 2015 as per which orphaned, abandoned and surrendered
children who are declared legally free for adoption by the Child Welfare Committee
can be placed for in-country and inter-country adoption. The eligibility
criteria for prospective adoptive parents is prescribed under Section 57 and
the procedure for adoption by Indian prospective adoptive parents living in
India is given in Section 58 of the JJ, Act 2015 respectively. Under Section 61
of the JJ Act, 2015 before issuing an adoption order, the Court is required to
satisfy itself that there is no payment or agreement to pay or reward any
consideration from the prospective adoptive parents to the Specialised Adoption
Agency, except towards the permitted adoption fees or service charge or
childcare corpus.
28. Due to the checks and
balances provided in the statute and CARA regulations, adoption becomes a
long-drawn process and there is a huge waiting list for parents to adopt
children. There are not enough children who are declared "legally free for
adoption" under the law. This seems to have led to a demand for children
and traffickers taking advantage of this demand.
29. Lakshmikant Pandey (supra)
primarily dealt with cases where the biological parents were coerced in diverse
ways to part with their children and then those children were given in adoption
to prospective parents outside India. In the present set of cases, a cognizable
offence is made out at the outset with the kidnapping of children, multiple
transactions of the sale of children ultimately handing over custody illegally.
iii. Missing Children and
Trafficking.
30. In Bachpan Bachao Andolan v.
Union of India & Ors., reported (2014) 16 SCC 616, this Court dealt with
issues regarding the manner in which a complaint about a missing child was
being handled by the local police station. The Court heard the National Human
Rights Commission and the National Legal Services Authority and issued
directions with a view to ensuring that cases of missing children are presumed
to be taken as cases of abduction or trafficking unless the investigation shows
otherwise. Some of the key directions issued by this Court which are relevant
for the present case are:
"1.
...in case of complaint with regard to any missing children made in a police
station, the same should be reduced into a First Information Report and
appropriate steps should be taken to see that follow-up investigation is taken
up immediately thereafter.
2. ...
in case of every missing child reported; there will be an initial presumption
of either abduction or trafficking, unless, in the investigation, the same is
proved otherwise. ...
...
whenever any complaint is filed before the police authorities regarding a
missing child, the same must be entertained under Section 154 Cr.P.C. However,
even in respect of complaints made otherwise with regard to a child, which may
come within the scope of Section 155 Cr.P.C., upon making an entry in the Book
to be maintained for the purposes of Section 155 Cr.P.C., and after referring
the information to the Magistrate concerned, continue with the inquiry into the
complaint. [...]"
31. Sometime in 2023, the
National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) entrusted the study on Human
Trafficking to the Bharatiya Institute of Research and Development (BIRD), New
Delhi. The report filed by BIRD dated 12.04.2023 has recorded the following
major findings of the study:
"Preventive
Measures, Profile of Victims & Their Exploitation
1. NCRB
Data shows that during 2019, about 3.80 Lakh persons were traced missing and
out of them, about 2/3rd were females. Out of total missing persons, a
significant number of persons could not be traced out and remained missing.
This shows that a large proportion of missing persons particularly women were
forced into sexual exploitation trade. The Supreme Court while hearing a case
in 2013 directed police that cases of missing children should be treated as
abduction or trafficking until proven otherwise, it is yet to become a reality.
2. Most
of the trafficked respondents (80.7%) were from economically weaker sections
i.e., BPL families (50.3%), AAY-Antyodaya Anna Yojana (30.4%) (Poorest of Poor)
hailing from Rural & Semi-urban areas.
3.
Friends/lovers/brokers/middlemen, strangers and migrant workers recruiters
/placement agents were the main persons who initiated victims in trafficking;
about 12% victims admitted that their family members are already trafficked.
4.
About 11% victim respondents were found minor at the time of trafficking and
thus, they were accompanied by family members during the course of trafficking.
As per NCRB Data for 2019 this comes to 44.04% (2914 victims were minor out of
total 6616 trafficked victims). Promise for paid work, to pay back or support
parents were the main reasons for trafficking in case of minor at the time of
trafficking.
5.
Sexual exploitation, violence, beating, over work and deprivation of sleep and
food were some of the types of physical and sexual abuse/violence experience by
trafficking victims and sex workers. About 58% victims also experience injuries
during their trafficking.
6.
Victim re-trafficking is a common occurrence, especially in socially and
economically disadvantaged areas. As per Report of International Organisation
for Migration (IOM), one study found rates of re-trafficking in India to be
25.8 per cent among women trafficked for sexual exploitation; of this figure,
8.4 per cent had been trafficked on three or more occasions.
7.
There is an increase in the recruitment of vulnerable people for online sexual
exploitation by traffickers, as well as a growing market for child sexual abuse
material and technology facilitated child sex trafficking.
8. Many
trafficked people (8%) are still unable to access governmental help due to
administrative hurdles especially victims hailing from Bangladesh, Nepal &
Myanmar. One of the most difficult parts is determining legal status/Identity.
Trafficked
people are frequently refused state services (e.g., medical, employment, social
assistance, kindergarten, etc.) as well as other advantages to which they
should be entitled and which are critical in the reintegration process.
9. A
negligible proportion (10.8%) of Law Enforcement Agency respondents & 7.6%
Programme Administrators admitted that there has been some kind of
vulnerabilities survey in their States, it was reported from Tamil Nadu
followed by Assam and Karnataka.
10. It
is reported that Domestic Work is offered to the majority of trafficked victims
or migrant workers, particularly females, by traffickers/placement
agencies/migrant worker recruiters, etc.
11.
Domestic workers, caretakers, and those employed in the sex and entertainment
industries are largely unprotected by labour laws. Female migrants may be
coerced into prostitution or the sale of sexual favours in order to survive or
provide for their family, especially if they are forced to migrate or are
displaced. Sexual exploitation is a threat to migrant women.
12. The
types of physical and psychological abuse human trafficking victims experience
have led to serious mental or emotional health consequences, including feelings
of severe guilt, posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, substance
abuse (alcohol or narcotics), and eating disorders. Victims of trafficking were
in need of psychological care as part of comprehensive medical treatment.
Stress, depression, sleeplessness, desperation, negative thinking, sort temper
and violence and lack of obedience were some of the psychological impacts of
human trafficking.
13.
Violent exploitation has resulted in survivors developing a mistrust of
care-giving individuals and systems, which has severely hindered the service
delivery.
14.
Prolonged physical and mental abuse has affected victim 's behaviour in
negative ways, having an impact on both physical and emotional responses.
Because trafficked persons experienced extreme forms of trauma over long
periods of time, their capacities both to understand what has happened to them
and to describe their experiences are directly impaired as a result of such
abuse. Victims found that it is difficult to make personal sense of the abuse
they have experienced, much less tried to explain it to the authorities of
shelter home or counsellors.
15.
Social withdrawal, poor communication skills, inability to express feelings,
difficulty with adjustment, lack of motivation and aggression, sexual
activeness, nightmares, inability to make friendship and frightened of adults
and strangers were some of the behavioural impacts reported by victims of human
trafficking.
16. The
level of awareness about schemes and programmes among the trafficked victim
respondents was reported very low as negligible proportion of respondents were
found aware about a few schemes such as Beti Bachao, Beti Padao, Swadhar Greh,
Ujjawala, child line and children's homes. A negligible proportion of
respondents further reported that they get benefits under Ujjawala, Swadhar,
compensation for sexual exploitation and children homes scheme.
17.
Only 3.6% victim respondents were aware about Compensation Scheme for Women
Victims/Survivor of Sexual Assault/other crime-2018 and only 2.6% respondents
got benefitted from the Scheme. The Victim Compensation Scheme established
under 357- A Cr.P.C. by National Legal Services Authorities are not reaching
the trafficked victims. In the last seven years, between 2012 and 2019, across
India, not even 100 victims of human trafficking have been awarded
compensation. Out of total 100 applications, only 30 survivors received
compensation amount. In 19 States, out of the total fund allocation of Rs
544.53 crore for victim compensation, only 128.27 crore has been utilized and
75 per cent of the funds remain unutilized.
18.
About 1/3rd victim respondents reported that their family is unwilling to
accept them back. However, about 2/3rd victims were willing to join mains steam
after exit of the trafficking. Slightly less than 1/3rd victims further
reported that they try to escape from destination of trafficking.
19.
Less than 1/3rd sex workers reported that their families are willing to accept
them back in their families. Similarly, majority of rescued victims were found
willing to join mainstream as against 1/3rd of sex workers who were willing to
join mainstream at the exit of trafficking. More than 2/5th rescued victims
attempted to escape from destination of trafficking as against 6% of sex
workers who try to escape from the trafficking.
20.
There are still a lot of social customs/practices that inducts young girls into
prostitution.
21.
Majority of the sex workers were from the age group of 16 years and above at
the time of entry in sex profession. However, more than 1/4th respondents were
less than 16 years of age.
22.
There is no sound programme and scheme to prevent second generation of
prostitutions.
23.
Psychological manipulation, threat of physical violence and pleasure are some
of the main habituation factors in sex profession.
24.
About 60% sex workers are willing to exit from the profession. Most of the
respondents reported that they do not want that their children follow their
mother's profession. However, majority of them require the support such as
livelihood and accommodation, alternative livelihood and safe and secure place
to live in order to exit from the current profession.
25. A
new form of organized Prostitution has emerged in recent years. Gangs involved
in organized prostitution are luring customers through internet, text messages
and mobile based applications, taking advantage of a loophole in the law which
is silent on regulating the proliferation, promotion and advertisement of
prostitution on digital platforms and even though leaflets /pamphlets. In the
name of Cross Gender Massage Services, Organized Sexual Services are being
provided at Night Clubs, Massage Parlours, Spas, Luxury Hotels & Resorts,
Motels, Dance Bars, Private Residences, huts and even vehicles etc.
26.
Poverty and illiteracy have been identified as two primary causes of
trafficking and primary data simply supports this theory as most of the parents
of trafficked victims are illiterate and were living in object poverty.
27.
About 60% parents of victim respondents said that family members are the
facilitators followed by friends/relatives (11.8%), contractors/agents (5.9%)
and placement agencies (2.9%). Surprisingly 23.5% respondents reported that
their children run away from home.
28.
Most of the (about 37%) parents reported that their children were working as
forced labour-domestic works.
29.
About 31% parents reported that their children were working in hazardous
industries, metallurgical industries, coal, fertilizers, mining, chemical &
petrochemicals, cement and firecracker workshops. As per census of 2011, this
figure is 20.7%.
30.
There is a lack of National Level Campaign against Human Trafficking and Media
is silent.
31.
About 2/5th Law Enforcement Agency respondents reported that the problem of
human trafficking is serious and this has been taken as priority in their
agency. Even less than 1/3rd respondents viewed that human trafficking is very
serious problem. It was found more pronouncing in Tamil Nadu followed by
Karnataka and West Bengal.
32. A
negligible proportion of Law Enforcement Agency respondents (7.5%) admitted
that placement agencies that facilitate migration are registered with law
enforcement agency. It was found more pronouncing in Tamil Nadu followed by
Karnataka and Maharashtra. Thus, most of the respondents revealed that
placement agencies are not registered with them. Thus, there is possibility of
exploitation of girls during their migration.
33. The
main reasons for non-stoppable trafficking as per law enforcement agencies were
recorded mainly poor economic conditions, social customs, gender inequality,
negligible penalties, domestic violence and poor law enforcement. However,
prosecuting officers reported that poor economic conditions, poor law
enforcement, negligible penalties, corruption, social customs, gender
inequalities and inadequate laws are important reasons responsible for human
trafficking.
34.
Majority of stakeholders during FGDs informed that it is necessary to identify
appropriate points of intervention so that migrants and future migrants are
warned about the dangers and repercussions of human trafficking and get
information that allows them to seek help if necessary.
35.
Poverty, lack of means of livelihood, many girl children, lack of education,
child marriages, and domestic violence are some of the major trafficking
vulnerabilities. However, trafficking vulnerabilities vary across the
stakeholders such as victims, law enforcement agencies and traffickers.
36.
Poverty along with gender discrimination, domestic abuse/ violence, organized
crime/ poor law enforcement, social inequities and cultural practices are some
of the supply side factors of human trafficking and Cheap labour force, cheap
domestic servants / maids, demand for women's sexual services and derived
demand-profit and revenue generated by third parties including recruiters are
some of the demand side factors responsible for human trafficking identified in
this research.
37.
Abuse of vulnerability/promise and offering money /jobs, allurement/ be funding
/ enticing with attractive offers, deception, fraud making, false promises of
marriage, physical force / use of force and threats were some of the modus
operandi of traffickers.
38. A
negligible proportion of victims (5.3%), traffickers (0.0%), parents (0.7%) and
client's (4.8%) respondent were found aware of National Human Rights
Commission. The awareness level was found slightly significant among women and
children victims followed by clients. The main sources of information about
NHRC were reported to be NGOs followed by print media and electronic media.
39.
About 56% of respondents, who were aware about NHRC, were partially aware of
role and functions of NHRC. It was found more pronouncing among the parents
followed by women and child victims, law enforcement agencies and clients.
Slightly more than 1/3rd respondents were found fully aware of role and
functions of NHRC. It was found more pronouncing among the public prosecutors
followed by programme administrators.
About
1/3rd clients and more than 1/4th service providers were not aware at all about
the roles and functions of NHRC.
40.
Insufficient and inadequate laws, poor enforcement, ineffective penalties,
minimal chances of prosecution, the relatively low risks involved, corruption
and complacency, poor visibility and less debate on the issue, the lack of
political will of the governments to implement policies and to provide adequate
services for victims- all has played important role in perpetuating
trafficking.
41. It
has been also expressed by all stakeholders that people who takes up the
cudgels against trafficking are in miniscule. It becomes difficult to combat
because everyone (trafficking camp) is unified. The profiting families are also
reluctant to talk."
32. The report thereafter talks
about law enforcement, traffickers and exploiters. The same reads thus:
"Law Enforcement,
Traffickers & Exploiters
1.
AHTUs in India are special police units, devoted to tackle human trafficking.
Following MHA advisory (July 2020), a recent report of 16 states and UTs
suggest that 225 AHTUs existed only on paper, and only 27 percent of the AHTUs
were operational. Most of the AHTUs are designated AHTUs burdened with a lot of
other law enforcement activities. The Anti Human Trafficking Units (AHTUs) are
not fully operative & Dedicated to Human Trafficking and in many districts
of India, AHTUs have not been established so far.
2.
Anti-Human Trafficking units (AHTUs) are currently under-resourced as well as
undertrained. AHTUs are not fully aware about various legislations and sections
dealing with human Trafficking.
3.
According to the Protocol, rescue teams should include: an official from the
Department of Labour, representatives of the CWCs, a local non-profit, a
doctor, and a female police officer or volunteer. These individuals must
receive training on relevant laws, their individual responsibilities, and
trauma prevention strategies. However, research participants reported that, in
reality, teams are often too small to cope with the numbers of children needing
rescue. Police officers, doctors, and female witnesses only sporadically take
part. Key informant data suggests this overreliance leads to ad hoc and
under-resourced raids directed by inexperienced or poorly supported workers, a
situation that can and does inflict additional trauma on vulnerable children.
4. The
Rescue Protocol states that details of the rescue and the identities of rescued
children must remain strictly confidential, and should not be disclosed to
outside parties, including the media. Yet privacy breaches concerning
occurrences and information leaks before, during and after raids are frequent.
5. Service
Provider Respondents stated that employers are often alerted to impending
raids, and that unsuccessful rescue operations can increase the risk of
employers retaliating against children.
6. Most
of the Government official stated that rescue team members directly solicit
media involvement so 'the public could understand that this type of activity is
a crime and punishable offence'. Publicity generates risks of retaliation
against rescued children, increased social stigma and difficulty in
reintegration. Moreover, widespread sensationalized media coverage of raids
plays an important role in simplifying the complex underlying social and
economic problems that perpetuate this problem.
7. Key
informant interviews held with police officers, Government Railway Police (GRP)
and Railway Protection Force (RPF) and other stakeholders-Child Welfare
Committee members, NGO representatives, and vendors in railway stations,
reveals that most cases of trafficking are not registered or reported which is
the major reason for the declining trend in reported cases of trafficking. It
is reported that Memo/GD entry is made by GRB/RPF and children are handed over
to Child Welfare Committee in most cases. Some of them are left without any
enquiry/record.
8. The
terms "human trafficking" and "migration" are being used
interchangeably, resulting in the denial of labour rights. It's crucial to
understand the difference between "trafficking, " "sex work,
" and "migration. "
9.
Human Trafficking incidents are underreported as a result, the complainant is
compelled to file a complaint through court order, while the offending police
officers walk free. There are cases of refusal by police to file a complaint on
the basis of jurisdiction/area, despite the fact that any police station can
file a complaint and the investigation can be moved to the appropriate police
station.
10.
There are several reasons for non-registration of cases. It varies from case to
case. The police officials are not much aware of IPC section 370. It is clearly
provided in explanation-2 of the Act that the consent of the victim is
immaterial in determination of the offence of trafficking, most of the police
officers don't accept it. In the case of Bhagubhai Patel v State of Gujarat,
the High Court held that a customer at a brothel comes within the purview of
sec 370 of the IPC because trafficking also includes prostitution, the reason
being that it is one type of exploitation.
11. The
police are burdened with so many responsibilities as there are vacancies in
police stations. Hence, they are reluctant as they cannot investigate the
entire chain which crosses over three to four states. No coordination mechanism
is available between source and destination states. Even if victims are rescued
and sent back to their home, there is no rehabilitation package under IPC which
would result in leaving the victims unprotected. There will be also problem in
filing charge sheet, trail and other proceedings for which the victims will not
either coordinate or turn hostile. Corruption, pressure from
superiors/politicians and lack of review mechanism force the officers in
non-reporting of incidents. Moreover, the child protection mechanisms are very
weak and they are not properly enquiring the victims and following the
procedures. They don't have any power or authority to influence the police
officers.
12. The
major challenges being faced by agency in encountering with investigation of
cases frequently reported of lack of victim cooperation/victim distressed,
community ignorance and lack of identity as Victims do not identify themselves
as a Victim. However, other important challenges were reported to be language
/cultural barriers, lack of adequate resources, victims do not identify
themselves as victims, lack of support with victim support providers, lack of
adequate training and knowledge as well as lack of procedures and clear
jurisdiction.
13.
NGOs and Service Providers reported that most of the AHTU or police relied on
NGOs to report victims to the police for action. In some cases, poor
inter-state coordination impeded victims' ability to obtain services and
participate in civil and criminal cases upon return to their home states. The
Odisha Labour Department took steps to improve interstate coordination on
labour trafficking cases by establishing help desks, located in the capital
cities of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, as well as in Delhi, to identify
trafficking victims from Odisha.
14.
International Justice Mission (IJM) and other NGOs reported that some officials
in Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Telangana and Karnataka treated bonded labour
cases as labour exploitation, which meant victims were not identified as bonded
labour victims, did not receive "release certificates," and were not
eligible for government compensation or services. In the Bonded Labour
Abolition Act, the definition of accused restricted to the principal employer
and leaves traffickers out of the ambit of prosecution.
15.
Labour department officials do not register FIR in most of the cases as
mandated under law as there is confusion & disagreement about who has this
responsibility. The resulting consensus is that employers are 'rarely' or
'never' arrested & unlikely to be convicted. Official figures for 2015 show
that nationwide only 55 cases of child trafficking for any purpose 1.09%
resulted in convictions out of 5,026 under investigation.
16.
Most of the traffickers during interaction told that they are also involved in
drug peddling but they were always arrested on grounds of human trafficking
rather than for drug peddling as they get bail easily in trafficking cases.
Justice S K Panigrahi of Odisha High Court. Justice Panigrahi has heavily
commented on this issue as reported in TOI: 02.07.2020. Drug trafficking is
linked to many forms of trafficking including diverse forms of labour
trafficking in agriculture, begging and diverse forms of hard physical labour.
17.
Associations with traffickers with Pan India Network of Traffickers &
smugglers is the basic reason for about half of the respondents for getting
involved in flesh trade, whereas more than one third (37%) respondents have
reported that earlier they were Sex Workers/Broker/Pimps, about 8% have
reported that earlier they were brothel owners. 2% respondents were practicing
their inherited business.
18.
Most of the traffickers (79.6%) reported that they traffic the victims on
promise of money/jobs and they directly contact to the family/victims through
their placement agencies. Placement agencies are playing a major role in
trafficking minor girls as well as children for the purpose of labour, sex
slavery and forced marriages.
19. The
traffickers have changed their modus operandi with the changes in law and society.
In most of the cases the trafficker is known to the victim who convinces the
victim and her/his family and further sell them over to placement agent.
20. For
objecting the work given by placement agencies, the victims are tortured,
thrashed and beaten up badly, many times these victim girls report sexual
violence and assault by the placement agents and even by their employers. The
girls are kept confined in the placement agencies till the time they are sold
further. These placement agencies keep on changing their addresses, name and
contact details to escape from law.
21.
Most of the Traffickers (98%) reported that Relatives /family members,
neighbour /friends and other middle men are playing critical role in making
women and children more vulnerable to join trafficking.
22. Big
profit and lack of alternative livelihood for trafficker are the main reasons
for continuity act of human trafficking.
23.
Witness turning hostile, protection of victims and witness, court adjournment
and victims pleading guilty were some of the major difficulties being faced by
Law Enforcement Agencies in working with cases of human trafficking.
24. The
phenomenon of flying sex workers is increasing day by day and has been
attributed the reason behind flourishing of brothels.
25.
More than 2/5th brothel keepers reported that police raids thrice and above in
a month in the brothels. The main reasons for police raids were reported to be
checking of minor girls, law and order problems and for official figures. More
than 1/4th brothel keepers reported that Police Raids the brothel when monthly
quota is not given to them. About 1/4th respondents reported that they are
often involved in contact with police. About 30% respondents reported that
police are also involved in racket of trafficking.
26.
Only 7.9% clients reported that they were ever harassed by Police and those who
were harassed 4.8% clients reported that they were harassed occasionally
whereas 3.2% reported that were rarely harassed. Clients those who were
harassed by Police were asked what was the action taken by Police when
encountered. 6.3% Clients reported that Police extracted money from them and
1.6% reported that they were verbally abused.
27. Easy
bail for traffickers, intimidation and humiliation of victims, and baseless
segregation of survivors/accused following rescue operation from brothels
during complaint filing are the major gaps in the enforcement mechanism to
combat human trafficking.
28.
Most of the Law Enforcement Agency respondents admitted that the officials of
their units/department have received training on the issues of human
trafficking. However, a large proportion of respondents in Karnataka, Uttar
Pradesh and Tamil Nadu revealed that officers have not received such training.
29.
Most (84.4%) of the Law Enforcement Agency respondents reported that less than
half of the officers in their departments have received training on the issues
of human trafficking. In-service, induction, orientation and refresher training
were organized on the issues of human trafficking.
30.
Most of the Law Enforcement Agency respondents (91.4%) revealed that they learn
the subject of human trafficking as regular law enforcement activities while
about half of the respondents admitted that they learn such knowledge from
training, conference and workshops. Thus, about 2/3rd respondents revealed that
their knowledge about legislations on human trafficking is at average level.
31.
Majority of the Law Enforcement Agency respondents (64.5%) reported that
section-7 and 8 are most commonly used sections of ITPA. However, about 58.1%
respondents revealed that section-3 and 4 are most commonly used sections of ITPA.
32.
There is a lack of integrated information system about the trafficked person
and the traffickers/brothel owners/operators.
33.
Police involvement in perpetuating the practice of trafficking is reported by
traffickers, NGOs as well as brothel keepers. Raid and rescue efforts have
often resulted in police harassment, detention and abuse of women and minor
girls as reported by victims rescued from the brothels of Pune and Mumbai.
Although rescue efforts provide an important means of escape for women and
minor girls in CS and a pathway to support services, when implemented poorly
without sufficient police training and adequate insight about the commercial
sex network, it has become traumatising for women and minor girls.
34. It
is reported that Law enforcement authorities, for example, the police force
themselves, have a limited understanding of the prevalence of trafficking of
women and minor girls for CSE and tend to be uninformed about their
responsibilities under the ITPA towards trafficking. This constitutes yet
another challenge in the prevention of trafficking of women and minor girls.
35. The
clause u/s 18 ITPA, which allows for the closure of brothels and the eviction
of offenders, has been applied sparingly. We have discovered a slew of brothels
operating beneath the radar of local cops in Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, Nasik,
Kolkata, and others.
33. The report has also talked
about prosecution of offenders:
"1.
Conviction rate in crimes against women and children for the past three years
has been low. The conviction rate in cases of crimes like rape, cruelty by
husband or his relatives, violation of
Protection
of Women from Domestic Violence Act, human trafficking, violation of Cyber
Crimes/Information Technology Act and Protection of Children from Sexual
offenses Act, have been amongst the lowest. It has been informed by the State
Government of Uttar Pradesh that they are conducting prosecution drives to
improve the conviction rate in crimes against women and children.
2.
According to NCRB data, conviction rate under human trafficking was recorded
42.4 per cent in 2017 which declined to 31.9 per cent in 2018 and further
reduced to 20 per cent in 2019. BIRD's Primary Data indicates that 20.8%
prosecuted persons were convicted. The main reasons for low conviction rate as
per public prosecutors were recorded witnessed turning hostile (44.8%), poor
evidence (20.7%), lengthy court procedure (13.8%), inappropriate charge sheet
(10.3%) and easy bail to traffickers (10.3%). However, reasons for low
conviction rate vary across the selected states.
3.
Material evidence, medical examination of victims, suspects and documents and
witness evidence are some of the major techniques being used in investigation
of crimes related to trafficking. However, techniques of investigation of
crimes vary across the states. The State Law Enforcement Agencies Reported that
forensics plays a critical role in the successful investigation, prosecution
and conviction.
4. NGOs
have reported that police rarely make the informant NGO witness of the recovery
memo or charge sheet, therefore most traffickers and brothel owners are able to
evade legal capture.
5. Most
of the rescued victims (56%) have reported that the statement of the
complainant/ victims is changed or ignored during the investigation, and it is
not video-graphed as required by law. Even it is videotaped, they are not sent
to the court with the charge sheet.
6.
Inappropriate charge sheet, witness turn hostile, poor evidences and lack of
victim or witness protection are some of the loopholes in law enforcement
mechanism for low-rate of prosecution.
7.
Service Providers, NGOs, Parents, Programme Administrators and Public
Prosecutors have reported that at different levels of government, a lack of
comprehensive responsibility for wrongdoing and corruption persisted,
contributing to widespread impunity.
8.
During FGDs with the Service Providers, NGOs, Parents, Programme Administrators
and Public Prosecutors it was deliberated that the survivors/families are
forced to become hostile and refuse to testify in the trial court due to social
pressure, threats, intimidation, bribes, police collaboration, protracted
trials, cross-cases, and a lack of faith in the criminal justice system, among
other things.
9.
About 1/4th Public Prosecuting Officers reported that present laws are able to
address the issues of human trafficking adequately. It has been noted that law
enforcement officials do not take any action against accused persons who
provide falsified documents in order to obtain bail. Protection of victims and
wetness, adequate rehabilitation facilities for victim, victim's access to
legal aid, long term crime control policy and victim's rights are some of the
ignored areas in existing laws.
10.
Most of the Public Prosecuting Officers (79.3%) admitted that existing laws
permit them to use of specialized evidence-gathering techniques in course. It
was found more pronouncing in Jharkhand, Karnataka, West Bengal, Maharashtra,
Assam and Uttar Pradesh. Witness turning hostile, protection of victim and
witness and victim pleading guilty are some of the major difficulties being
faced in working with cases of human trafficking.
11. It
has been noted that law enforcement officials do not take any action against
accused persons who provide falsified documents in order to obtain bail.
12.
Majority of the Public Prosecuting Officers (69.6%) reported that less than 25%
officers have received training on the issues of human trafficking. Trainings
were mainly organized by department of justice, service providers and
independent trainers. About 79% respondents reported that officers have
received training on the issues of human trafficking. It was found more
pronouncing in Karnataka followed by West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand.
However, about half of the respondents in Tamil Nadu and 1/3rd respondents in
Assam ad Maharashtra revealed that officers have not received such training.
13.
Approximate only half of the Prosecuting Officers has received Training on the
issues of Trafficking & prosecution of offenders and those who received the
training majority of the respondents (82.6%) revealed that training on the
issues of human trafficking has not been effective.
14.
There are major coordination gaps/lacks among NGOs inside states, across
states, and across borders, as well as other stakeholders."
34. On the subject of effective
law enforcement and prosecution, the report states thus:
"1.
Law enforcement officials should treat cases of missing children as abduction
or trafficking until proven otherwise as per Direction of The Supreme Court in
2013 and search for these people in every possible location. When children
disappear, Law EAs should start the missing person's process, look into what
happened, disseminate information, and conduct investigations, collaborating
with other agencies as needed.
2.
About 31 percent Parent respondents reported that their children were working
in hazardous industries- metallurgical industries, coal, fertilizers, mining,
chemical & petrochemicals, cement and firecracker workshops. We recommend
that provisions of The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection) of Children Act,
2000: and The Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act, 1986: should be
implemented in letter and sprits. Violators should be punished. Regular check
of hazardous industries/units must be carried out by the Labour Inspectors.
3. The
idea of community policing needs to be made more widely known in order for
people and non-governmental organisations to get involved in policing to stop
and combat the trafficking of women and children.
4.
Anti-Human Trafficking units (AHTUs) are currently under-resourced as well as
undertrained. There is an urgent need for additional Capacity Building of AHTUs
and Providing them adequate funds and infrastructure because "the police
lack the means to undertake a thorough investigation if the person is
trafficked from another state. "
5. To
address the issue and protect the rights of victims and survivors,
comprehensive legislation is required due to the underreporting of human
trafficking instances and gaps in other laws. For law enforcement
organisations, there is a need for an extensive training and capacity-building
programme on the topic of human trafficking. It should be made mandatory for
AHTU or the Police to report every case of human trafficking.
6. We
advise the police to use the following strategies to win the trust of victims:
Assuring victims that they are not the subject of an inquiry Victims deserve to
be treated with respect and decency. Employ a translator if the victims speak
different languages, ensuring that the victim's identity and privacy are
protected by taking all necessary precautions; Keep the accused far enough away
from the victims to be safe. Check to see if Section 228 A of the IPC and
Section 21 of the JJ Act are being followed; Inform the victims of the
investigation's development; Keep in mind that the victim takes all of their
belongings with them. Do not take offence if traumatised victims behave
inappropriately or refuse to interact. Avoid, among other things, using
derogatory language or making humiliating gestures or body language. Police
officers may be able to overcome these challenges using their knowledge,
skilful communication abilities, and information because it is also a question
of counselling and persuasion.
7.
According to public prosecutors, the primary causes for the low conviction rate
include witnesses becoming hostile, inadequate evidence, a long court process,
an improper charge sheet, and easy bail for traffickers. The problem of
insufficient evidence and improper charge sheet could be addressed by
conducting thorough investigations into human trafficking instances. Because
most witnesses and victims become hostile during prosecution, more emphasis
should be placed on gathering Material Evidence, Medical Examination of
Victims, Suspects, Digital Videography of Investigations & Statements of Victims
and Documents Supplemented by Forensic Evidences for filling a charge sheet
instead of a statement under section 161 of the Cr.P.C., as this will almost
certainly increase the chances of offenders being convicted.
8. A
qualified and experienced investigative agency, such as the National
Investigation Agency (NIA), which has been mandated to look into interstate and
international trafficking crimes, is urgently required for the proper
investigation of human trafficking cases. We support the full capacity building
of law enforcement and prosecuting organisations, including providing them with
state-of-the-art methods and tools for obtaining information and forensic
evidence, as well as witness and victim protection, which may lead to a more
severe conviction.
9.
Recruitment agencies, document forgers, brokers, brothel owners, debt
collectors, managers and owners of employment agencies, corrupt immigration
officials, consular staff, embassy staff, law enforcement officers, border
guards who accept bribes in exchange for passports, visas, and safe transit,
and all others who are involved by their acts of omission and commission that
result in exploitation should be dealt harshly under law.
10. In
order to safeguard some victims of human trafficking, prosecutors should set up
child-friendly courts, as is done in Telangana and West Bengal. Most of the
time, courts should employ video conferencing to hear testimony from victims
who have been reintegrated or repatriated. Since it is essential for convicting
traffickers and criminals, victim and witness protection should be carefully
considered. Because of poor witness protection and the drawn-out legal process,
many victims were reluctant to take part in trials against their traffickers.
As a result, it should be ensured that cases are routinely reviewed by superior
authorities.
11. To
combat human trafficking, all states and territories should establish an
Anti-Human Trafficking Bureau at the state capital level, as well as
independent, non-designated Anti- Human Trafficking Units (AHTUs) at every
district level, and use of Women Help Desks to monitor investigations at every
police station by a Senior Officer at State Level. Dedicated AHTUs are urgently
needed because some AHTUs lacked defined mandates, were not completely focused
on human trafficking, and often received requests for assistance months later,
limiting the effectiveness of investigations. In a few cases, police allegedly freed
alleged sex traffickers on bond right away, allowing them to focus on other crimes.
Trafficking investigations are lengthy and complex, and we believe that having
full-time resources devoted to these investigations are essential for success.
These officials also underscore the need to provide and use undercover assets
and to establish and nurture informants and witnesses.
12.
Ministry of Home Affairs should collaborate with the Ministry of Railways. The
Railway Board should be asked to enlist the help of the Railway Protection
Force (RPF) and the Government Railway Police (GRP) to combat human trafficking
at railway stations. They should instruct GRP and RPF officials to remain
watchful and alert when dealing with such instances and mandatorily report each
and every case of Human trafficking.
13.
Brothels ought to be shut down right away. A thorough action plan needs to be
created for this project. Prostitutes and commercial sex workers need to be
rehabilitated into other fields in order to improve their livelihoods. The
relationship between police and owners of brothels makes things worse. This
nexus has to be broken up as soon as feasible.
14. It
is advised that rescue teams strictly follow rescue protocols and include a
representative from the Department of Labor, representatives from the CWCs, a
local non-profit, a doctor, and a female police officer or volunteer. Almost
every stakeholder reported that police do not follow standard rescue protocol.
15.
Enforcing the law in relation to applicable Acts like CLPRA, BLSA, IPTA, JJA,
and IPC involves not only police but also many other authorities involved in
the CriminalJustice System, such as executive magistrates, labour officials,
CWC members, and in-charges of Homes. In order to strengthen the state's
investigation and prosecution apparatus in this area, the State government
should create a time-bound action plan.
16. The
development of all stakeholders' capacities and a regular programme of gender
sensitization are absolutely necessary.
17. A
First Information Report should be filed in every instance of child labour, the
case should be thoroughly investigated, and the offenders should be punished.
As a result, there is an urgent need to train and sensitise labour department
workers on the aforementioned issue.
18. The
lack of an interpreter who is fluent in the relevant local languages makes it
difficult to care for children who have been trafficked from different states.
As a result, professional interpreters are required in such situations. At the
district level, a database of competent language interpreters should be kept
and shared with law enforcement agencies, service providers, and the courts.
19.
CWCs must be established in each district as soon as possible, according to
available guidelines, and multiple appointment practices should be strictly
prohibited to eliminate potential conflicts of interest. CWCs should include
those who work in the fields of law, medicine, and psychology.
20. It
is found that almost all CWCs are working in inadequate sittings, some of which
are seriously inadequate. To deal with this, three different sorts of sitting
venue styles are utilised by several CWCs across the nation. There are further
unique sittings available, including rotating and parallel sittings. Each,
however, offers a unique set of benefits and drawbacks. A mixed sitting
configuration ofCWC is advised as needed.
21. The
Act and the Rules do not currently provide any procedures for case management
during hearings. While some CWCs successfully handle proceedings and financial
flow, others seem to be struggling and using ineffective/inappropriate
approaches. The necessary authorities must create a flawless attendance system,
such as Aadhar Enabled Biometric Attendance, to prevent prolonged absenteeism
from CWC meetings because it interferes with the evaluation of children's
rights.
22.
Strong action against human traffickers should be taken, including criminal
penalties and the freezing of their bank accounts. The unlawful assets amassed
by traffickers and other parties as a result of exploiting trafficked victims
should be seized and forfeited.
Human
trafficking, particularly of minors, is a kind of modern-day slavery that
necessitates a holistic, multi-sectoral strategy to address the problem 's
complicated dimensions. Law cannot be the exclusive device for dealing with
challenging social and economic issues. Given the infancy of services to
trafficked people, monitoring and evaluation studies should be apart of any
assistance programme, both governmental and private. Anti-trafficking
legislation must be enforced properly, which necessitates educating individuals
about the laws in place so that these rights are respected and upheld in
practice. There are provisions for victim confidentiality, in camera trial
(Section 327 CrPC), and compensation (Section 357 CrPC) in the existing laws.
These provisions should be applied in relevant circumstances to protect
victims' rights. In dealing with instances, the National Human Rights
Commission has a larger role to play, and it must make recommendations and
adopt remedial actions."
C. ROLE OF EACH OF THE ACCUSED
PERSONS
35. We shall now give a fair idea
as regards the role of each of the accused persons and other details as to how
they came to be released on bail by the High Court. The details of the accused
persons are as follows: -
|
S. NO. |
PARTICULARS |
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1. |
Item No. 12 |
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SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50420/2024:
230-days delay in filing Accused: Santosh Sao Role of Accused: Santosh Sao is
a resident of Jharkhand who was involved in the illegal purchase of a
kidnapped minor boy-child named Sunny Nishad, who is a victim in connected
case bearing FIR No. 76/2023 registered in P.S. Daraganj, Prayagraj, U.P. He bought
theboy-child from co-accused Jagveer Baranwal and Anuradha Devi for Rs. 4
Lakhs. During Police investigation, the boy-child was found in his
possession. FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi; FIR No. 201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi and
FIR No. 76/2023, P.S Daraganj, Prayagraj. Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: ■ He has not been named
in the FIR. Name was disclosed by co-accused Anuradha Devi in police custody.
■ Victim Recovered from
co-accused Nandlal Ram. |
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■ Similarly situated
co-accused in terms of role; Gudiya Devi has been granted bail. ■ He has been in custody
for 6-months. Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court: ■ Appear on the date
fixed by the trial court; ■ Not tamper with the
prosecution evidence; and, ■ Not pressurize the
prosecution witnesses. |
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2. |
Item No. 12.1 |
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|
SLP (Crl.) No. 592 of 2025: No
delay in filing Accused: Sanjay Modanwal Role of Accused: Sanjay
Modanwal, along with his wife, Shikha Devi @ Shikha Modanwal (co-accused),
played a key role in acquiring trafficked children. After kidnapping these
children, they would circulate their photos among the other members of their
trafficking racket. Once they identified a potential customer, they would
sell the trafficked child to a middleman within the gang, facilitating the
further sale of the victim. FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi and FIR No. 74/2023, P.S Vindhyachal,
Mirzapur. Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: ■ He has not been named
in the FIR. Name was disclosed by co-accused Manish Jain in police custody. ■ Victim Recovered was
not recovered from his possession. ■ Similarly situated co-accused
in terms of role; Santosh Gupta @ Santosh Modanwal has been granted bail. ■ No criminal antecedents
■ He has been in custody
for 1-year 2-months. Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court: ■ Appear on each and
every date fixed by the trial court; ■ Not tamper with the
prosecution evidence; and, ■ Not pressurize the
prosecution witnesses. |
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3. |
Item No. 12.2 and 12.17 |
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SLP (Crl.) 590 of 2025 and SLP
(Crl.) D-No. 50517/ 2024: Nil and 12-days delay in filing. Accused: Shivam Gupta @ Praveen
Modanwal Role of Accused: Shivam Gupta
is also a resident of Varanasi, who along with his accomplices, trafficked
minor children. He, along with his father, Santosh Gupta and others,
kidnapped multiple children from various locations, including Chowka Gate,
Allahabad, and Mirzapur, between March and April 2023. After the kidnappings,
he helped transport the children to Shikha Devi, who facilitated their sale.
He participated in the kidnapping of the
minor children, most of whom were sold to buyers in Jharkhand, often for sums
between Rs. 40,000 and Rs. 1,50,000. |
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|
|
FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi; FIR No. 201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi; FIR
No. 50/2023, P.S. Chetganj, Varanasi; FIR No. 74/2023, P.S Vindhyachal,
Mirzapur and FIR No. 76/2023, P.S Daraganj, Prayagraj. Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail In FIR No. 193/2023: - ■ He has not been named
in the FIR. Name was disclosed by co-accused in police custody. ■ Co-accused Manish Jain
has been granted bail. ■ He has been in custody
for 1-year 2-months. In FIR No. 193/2023:
-"Considering the entire facts and circumstances of the case,
submissions of learned counsel for the parties, nature of evidence and all attending
facts and circumstances of the case, without expressing any opinion on merits
of the case [...]" Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court In FIR No. 193/2023: - ■ Not tamper with the
prosecution evidence; ■ Not pressurize the
prosecution witnesses; and, ■ Appear on each and
every date fixed by the trial court; In FIR No. 50/2023: - ■ Not tamper with the
prosecution evidence; ■ Not influence any
witness, ■ Appear before the trial
court on the date fixed unless personal presence is exempted; and, ■ Not directly or
indirectly make any inducement, threat or promise to any person acquainted
with the facts of the case so as to dissuade him from disclosing such facts
to the Court to any police officer or tamper with the evidence. |
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4. |
Item No. 12.3 and 12.10 |
|||||
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|
SLP (Crl.) D-No.49397/2024 and
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50423/ 2024: 160-days and 169-days delay in filing Accused: Jagveer Baranwal Role of Accused: Jagveer
Baranwal is a resident of Jharkhand. He was actively involved in purchasing
kidnapped children from his accomplices at low prices and reselling them for
significantly higher amounts. Jagveer, who worked as a nurse alongside Anuradha
Devi, leveraged his position to facilitate these illegal transactions. The
police even recovered a trafficked child directly from his possession as he
and his accomplices were preparing to sell the child in another connected
case of child trafficking. |
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|
|
FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi; FIR No. 201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi; FIR
No. 74/2023, P.S Vindhyachal, Mirzapur and FIRNo. 76/2023, P.S Daraganj,
Prayagraj. Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: In FIR No. 193/2023: - ■ He has not been named
in the FIR. Name was disclosed by co-accused Anuradha Devi in police custody.
■ Similarly situated
co-accused in terms of role; co-accused Manish Jain has been granted bail. ■ He has been in custody
for 8-months. In FIR No. 201/2023: - ■ No material on record
with regard to tampering of evidence or intimidation of witness. ■ Pendency of several
criminal cases against the accused itself no basis for refusal of bail. ■ No evidence with regard
to criminal antecedents. ■ Bail is a rule, jail is
an exception Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court: In FIR No. 193/2023: - ■ Not tamper with the
prosecution evidence; ■ Not pressurize the
prosecution witnesses; and, ■ Appear on each and
every date fixed by the trial court; In FIR No. 201/2023: - ■ Not tamper with the
evidence during trial; ■ Not pressurize /
intimidate the prosecution witnesses; ■ Appear on each and
every date fixed by the trial court, unless personal presence is exempted; ■ Shall make himself available
for interrogation by a police officer as and when required ■ Not commit an offence
similar to the offence of which he is accused, or suspected, of the
commission of which he is suspected; ■ Not directly or
indirectly make any inducement, threat or promise to any person acquainted
with the facts of the case so as to dissuade him from disclosing such facts
to the Court or to any police officer or tamper with the evidence; ■ Not leave India without
the previous permission of the Court; and, ■ In the event, he
changes residential address, he shall inform the court concerned about new
residential address in writing. |
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5. |
Item No. 12.5 |
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SLP (Crl.) D-No. 49600/2024:
202-days delay in filing. Accused: Yashoda Devi Pandit Role of Accused: Yashoda Devi
Pandit, along with her husband Mukesh Pandit, purchased the Petitioner,
Sanjay's minor son, Rohit for Rs. 2,60,000 from co-accused Jagveer Baranwal,
Anuradha, and Shikha Devi. The police |
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|
raided her home in Hazaribagh,
Jharkhand, and recovered the child, whom she had named Anup Pandit. FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi and FIR No. 74/2023, P.S Vindhyachal,
Mirzapur. Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: "Considering the facts and
circumstances of the case, perusing the record and also considering the
nature of allegations, arguments advanced by the learned counsel for the
parties and keeping in mind that co accused has already been released on bail
by this Court and without expressing any opinion on the merit of the case
[...]" Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court ■ File an undertaking to
the effect that applicant shall not seek any adjournment on the dates fixed
for evidence when the witnesses are present in court. In case of default of
this condition, it shall be open for the trial court to treat it as abuse of
liberty of bail and pass orders in accordance with law; ■ Remain present before
the trial court on each date fixed, either personally or through his/her
counsel. In case of his absence, without sufficient cause, the trial court
may proceed against applicant under Section 229-A of the IPC; ■ In case, the applicant
misuses the liberty of bail during trial and in order to secure presence of
the applicant, proclamation under Section 82 Cr.P.C. is issued and the
applicant fail to appear before the court on the date fixed in such
proclamation, then, the trial court shall initiate proceedings against the
applicant, in accordance with law, under Section 174 A of the IPC; and, ■ Remain present, in
person, before the trial court on the dates fixed for (i) opening of the
case, (ii) framing of charge and (iii) recording of statement under Section
313 Cr.P.C. If in the opinion of the trial court absence of the applicant is
deliberate or without sufficient cause, then it shall be open for the trial
court to treat such default as abuse of liberty of bail and proceed against
the applicant in accordance with law. |
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|
6. |
Item No. 12.5 |
|||||
|
|
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 496639/2024:
161-days delay in filing. Accused: Mukesh Pandit Role of the Accused: Mukesh
Pandit, along with his wife Yashoda Devi, purchased the Petitioner Sanjay's
minor son, Rohit for Rs. 2,60,000 from co accused Jagveer Baranwal, Anuradha,
and Shikha Devi. He was involved in negotiating and finalizing the deal for
the trafficked child. The police later recovered the child from their home in
Hazaribagh, Jharkhand. FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi and FIR No. 74/2023, P.S Vindhyachal,
Mirzapur. |
|||||
|
|
Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: "Considering the facts and
circumstances of the case, perusing the record and also considering the
nature of allegations, arguments advanced by the learned counsel for the
parties and keeping in mind that co accused has already been released on bail
by this Court and without expressing any opinion on the merit of the case
[...]” Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court: ■ File an undertaking to
the effect that applicant shall not seek any adjournment on the dates fixed
for evidence when the witnesses are present in court. In case of default of
this condition, it shall be open for the trial court to treat it as abuse of
liberty of bail and pass orders in accordance with law; ■ Remain present before
the trial court on each date fixed, either personally or through his/her
counsel. In case of his absence, without sufficient cause, the trial court
may proceed against applicant under Section 229-A of the IPC; ■ In case, the applicant
misuses the liberty of bail during trial and in order to secure presence of
the applicant, proclamation under Section 82 Cr.P.C. is issued and the
applicant fail to appear before the court on the date fixed in such
proclamation, then, the trial court shall initiate proceedings against the
applicant, in accordance with law, under Section 174 A of the IPC; and, ■ Remain present, in
person, before the trial court on the dates fixed for (i) opening of the
case, (ii) framing of charge and (iii) recording of statement under Section
313 Cr.P.C. If in the opinion of the trial court absence of the applicant is
deliberate or without sufficient cause, then it shall be open for the trial
court to treat such default as abuse of liberty of bail and proceed against
the applicant in accordance with law. |
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|
7. |
Item No. 12.7,12.14 and 12.16 |
|||||
|
|
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 49643/2024;
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50455/2024 and SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50516/2024: 67-days, 85-days
& 38-days delay in filing respectively. Accused: Santosh Gupta @
Santosh Modanwal Role of the Accused: Santosh
Gupta is a resident of Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh. Along with his co-accused,
Vinay Mishra and Shivam Gupta (his son), Santosh Gupta was responsible for
trafficking vulnerable children from different regions, particularly from
Allahabad. After trafficking the children, they were kept in the custody of
Shikha Devi and Sanjay Modanwal, before being sold to customers. He played a
key role in acquiring the kidnapped children at low prices and selling them
at higher prices with the help of accomplices like Manish Jain and Shikha. FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi; FIR No. 201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi; FIR
No. 50/2023, P.S. Chetganj, Varanasi; FIR No. 74/2023, P.S Vindhyachal,
Mirzapur and FIR No. 76/2023, P.S Daraganj, Prayagraj. |
|||||
|
|
Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: In FIR No. 193/2023:
-"Considering the facts and circumstances of the case, submissions made
by learned counsel for the parties, the evidence on record, pending trial and
considering the complicity of accused, severity of punishment, at this stage,
without expressing any opinion on the merits of the case [...]" In FIR No. 201/2023: - ■ He has not been named
in the FIR. Name was disclosed by co-accused Jagveer Baranwal in police
custody. ■ Victim was not
recovered from his possession. ■ Out of four cases of
criminal history, one bail order has been appended. ■ Similarly situated
co-accused in terms of role; Nandlal Ram has been granted bail. In FIR No. 50/2023:
-"Considering the facts and circumstances of the case and submissions
made by learned counsel for the applicant and learned A.G. A., without
expressing any opinion on the merits of the case [...]" Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court ■ Not tamper with the
prosecution evidence; and, ■ Remain present, in
person, before the trial court on the dates fixed for (i) opening of the
case, (ii) framing of charge and (iii) recording of statement under Section
313 Cr.P.C. If in the opinion of the trial court absence of the applicant is
deliberate or without sufficient cause, then it shall be open for the trial
court to treat such default as abuse of liberty of bail and proceed against
the applicant in accordance with law. In FIR No. 201/2023: - ■ Attend and co-operate
the trial proceedings pending before the court concerned on the dates fixed
after release. ■ Not tamper with the
witnesses; ■ Not indulge in any
illegal activities during the bail period. In FIR No. 50/2023: - ■ Not tamper with the
evidence during the trial; ■ Not influence any
witness; ■ Appear before the trial
court on the date fixed, unless personal presence is exempted; and, ■ Not directly or
indirectly make any inducement, threat or promise to any person acquainted
with the facts of the case so as to dissuade him from disclosing such facts
to the Court to any police officer or tamper with the evidence. |
|||||
|
8. |
Item No. 12.8 |
|||||
|
|
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50418/2024:
236-days delay in filing. Accused: Gudiya Devi |
|||||
|
|
Role of the Accused: Gudiya
Devi is a resident of Jharkhand who played a significant role in trafficking
minor children. Her primary responsibility is identifying potential customers
for the trafficked children and receiving a commission for aiding the
trafficking process. She was frequently involved in multiple transactions,
including selling children brought by accused persons namely, Shikha Devi,
Vinay Mishra, Jagveer Baranwal, Anuradha Devi, Santosh Gupta, Shivam Gupta.
Gudiya helped in selling the trafficked children for amounts ranging from Rs.
40,000 to Rs. 3,50,000 and more. FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi and FIR No. 201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi. Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: ■ No material evidence
regarding tampering of evidence or intimidating of witness in previous
criminal cases ■ Pendency of several
criminal cases against an accused may itself cannot be a basis for refusal of
bail ■ No evidence with regard
to criminal antecedents ■ Bail is a rule, jail is
an exception Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court: ■ Not tamper with the
evidence during the trial; ■ Not
pressurize/intimidate the prosecution witness; ■ Appear before the trial
court on the date fixed, unless personal presence is exempted and/or the
applicant shall make herself available for interrogation by a police officer
as and when required; ■ Not commit an offence
similar to the offence of which she is accused, or suspected, of the
commission of which she is suspected; ■ Not directly or
indirectly make any inducement, threat or promise to any person acquainted
with the facts of the case so as to dissuade her from disclosing such facts
to the Court or to any police officer or tamper with the evidence; ■ Not leave India without
the previous permission of the Court; and, ■ In the event, the
applicant changes residential address, the applicant shall inform the court
concerned about new residential address in writing. |
|
||||
|
9. |
Item No. 12.9 |
|
||||
|
|
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50422/2024:
182-days delay in filing. Accused: Anuradha Devi Role of the Accused: Anuradha
Devi, a nurse at a primary health centre in Hazaribagh, Jharkhand, is the
kingpin of the organized inter-state child trafficking racket. Using her
unrestricted access to vulnerable children, she orchestrated the kidnapping
and trafficking of minor children. With the help of her associates namely,
Jagveer Baranwal, Manish Jain, Gudiya Devi, Shikha Devi, Vinay Mishra, Shivam
Gupta and others, she bought trafficked children at prices as low as Rs.
20,000 and sold them at significantly higher rates, amounting to Rs.
3,50,000. Her operation is extensive, involving numerous transactions where
children were trafficked from various regions. |
|
||||
|
|
Anuradha's heinous role in
exploiting and selling minor children is supported by the statements of
several co-accused. FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi; FIR No. 201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi; FIR
No. 74/2023, P.S Vindhyachal, Mirzapur and FIRNo. 76/2023, P.S Daraganj,
Prayagraj. Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: "Considering the facts and
circumstances of the case and submissions made by learned counsel for the
applicant and learned A.G. A., without expressing any opinion on the merits
of the case [...]" Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court: ■ File an undertaking to
the effect that applicant shall not seek any adjournment on the dates fixed
for evidence when the witnesses are present in court. In case of default of
this condition, it shall be open for the trial court to treat it as abuse of
liberty of bail and pass orders in accordance with law; ■ Remain present before
the trial court on each date fixed, either personally or through his/her
counsel. In case of his absence, without sufficient cause, the trial court
may proceed against applicant under Section 229-A of the IPC; ■ In case, the applicant
misuses the liberty of bail during trial and in order to secure presence of
the applicant, proclamation under Section 82 Cr.P.C. is issued and the
applicant fail to appear before the court on the date fixed in such
proclamation, then, the trial court shall initiate proceedings against the
applicant, in accordance with law, under Section 174 A of the IPC; and, ■ Remain present, in
person, before the trial court on the dates fixed for (i) opening of the
case, (ii) framing of charge and (iii) recording of statement under Section
313 Cr.P.C. If in the opinion of the trial court absence of the applicant is
deliberate or without sufficient cause, then it shall be open for the trial
court to treat such default as abuse of liberty of bail and proceed against
the applicant in accordance with law. |
|
||||
|
10. |
Item No. 12.11 and 12.15 |
|
||||
|
|
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50430/2024 and
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50515/ 2024: 154-days and 64-days delay in filing
respectively. Role of the Accused: Manish
Jain, a resident of Rajasthan, is a key player in the organized inter-state
child trafficking racket. He actively managed the illegal operations,
coordinating the sale and purchase of trafficked children across regions. He
frequently worked with co-accused like Vinay Mishra and Shikha Devi,
trafficking minors and selling them at higher prices. In March and April
2023, he sold multiple trafficked children for amounts ranging from Rs.
40,000 to Rs. 2,60,000. He was arrested by the police in Varanasi while
attempting to sell a 4 year-old boy-child named Rohit, a trafficked victim
child in FIR No. 193/2023 (P.S. Bhelupur). |
|
||||
|
|
FIR Registered: FIR No.
193/2023, P.S Bhelupur, Varanasi; FIR No. 201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi and
FIR No. 50/2023, P.S. Chetganj, Varanasi. Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: In FIR No. 193/2023:
-"Considering the facts and circumstances of the case and submissions
made by learned counsel for the applicant and learned A.G. A., without
expressing any opinion on the merits of the case [...]" In FIR No. 50/2023: - ■ No material on record
with regard to tampering of evidence or intimidation of witness. ■ Pendency of several
criminal cases against the accused itself no basis for refusal of bail. ■ No evidence with regard
to criminal antecedents. ■ Bail is a rule, jail is
an exception Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court In FIR No. 193/2023: - ■ File an undertaking to
the effect that applicant shall not seek any adjournment on the dates fixed
for evidence when the witnesses are present in court. In case of default of
this condition, it shall be open for the trial court to treat it as abuse of
liberty of bail and pass orders in accordance with law; ■ Remain present before
the trial court on each date fixed, either personally or through his/her
counsel. In case of his absence, without sufficient cause, the trial court
may proceed against applicant under Section 229-A of the IPC; ■ In case, the applicant
misuses the liberty of bail during trial and in order to secure presence of
the applicant, proclamation under Section 82 Cr.P.C. is issued and the
applicant fail to appear before the court on the date fixed in such
proclamation, then, the trial court shall initiate proceedings against the
applicant, in accordance with law, under Section 174 A of the IPC; and, ■ Remain present, in
person, before the trial court on the dates fixed for (i) opening of the
case, (ii) framing of charge and (iii) recording of statement under Section
313 Cr.P.C. If in the opinion of the trial court absence of the applicant is
deliberate or without sufficient cause, then it shall be open for the trial
court to treat such default as abuse of liberty of bail and proceed against
the applicant in accordance with law. In FIR No. 50/2023: -■
Not tamper with the prosecution evidence; and, ■ Remain present, in
person, before the trial court on the dates fixed for (i) opening of the
case, (ii) framing of charge and (iii) recording of statement under Section
313 Cr.P.C. If in the opinion of the trial court absence of the applicant is
deliberate or without sufficient cause, then it shall be open for the trial
court to treat such default as abuse of liberty of bail and proceed against
the applicant in accordance with law. |
|
||||
|
11. |
Item No. 12.12 |
|
||||
|
|
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50435/2024:
138-days delay in filing. Role of the Accused: Nandlal
Ram is a resident of Kolkata, West Bengal who purchased the trafficked
one-year-old son of the Petitioner, Ms. Pinki in FIR No. 201/2023. He
purchased the victim boy child from his co-accused, Anuradha Devi for Rs.
3,50,000 lakhs. During the course of the police investigation, the
authorities tracked the boy to Nandlal's possession in Kolkata, where the
child was eventually recovered. FIR Registered: FIR No.
201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: ■ No evidence regarding
the accused absconding, or probability of repeating the same offences, or
intimidating the witnesses. ■ No evidence regarding
criminal antecedents. Conditions of Bail granted by
High Court: ■ Not tamper with the
evidence during the trial; ■ Not
pressurize/intimidate the prosecution witness; ■ Appear before the trial
court on the date fixed, unless personal presence is exempted and/or the
applicant shall make herself available for interrogation by a police officer
as and when required; ■ Not commit an offence
similar to the offence of which she is accused, or suspected, of the
commission of which she is suspected; ■ Not directly or
indirectly make any inducement, threat or promise to any person acquainted
with the facts of the case so as to dissuade her from disclosing such facts
to the Court or to any police officer or tamper with the evidence; ■ Not leave India without
the previous permission of the Court; and, ■ In the event, the
applicant changes residential address, the applicant shall inform the court
concerned about new residential address in writing. |
|
||||
|
12. |
Item No. 12.13 |
|
||||
|
|
SLP (Crl.) D-No. 50453/2024:
96-days Delay in filing Accused: Kuldeep Paswan @ Kuldeep Ram Role of the Accused: Kuldeep
Paswan is a resident of Jharkhand who played a significant role in the
trafficking of minor children, working closely with accomplices namely
GudiyaDevi, JagveerBaranwal, and Anuradha Devi. He was involved in the buying
and selling of trafficked children, often purchasing them at low prices and
reselling them at significantly higher amounts. Kuldeep, along with his co
accused, sold a trafficked child for Rs. 3,50,000, who was brought to them by
accused Shikha Devi and Vinay Mishra. His involvement in these transactions
highlights his active participation in the organized trafficking of minors,
further facilitated by Gudiya Devi, who identified potential customers. FIR Registered: FIR No.
201/2023, P.S Cantt, Varanasi |
|
||||
|
|
Consideration by High Court
while granting Bail: ■ Name was disclosed by
co-accused Anuradha Devi in police custody. ■ Victim Recovered from
co-accused Nandlal Ram who has been enlarged on bail. ■ Similarly situated
co-accused in terms of role; Gudiya Devi has also been granted bail. ■ He has been in custody
for 8-months. |
|||||
36. We have been provided with
information as regards the current status of the accused persons:
CURRENT STATUS OF ACCUSED PERSONS
|
S. No. |
Name of the accused |
FIR No. 201/2023 P.S. Cantt.,
Varanasi |
FIR No. 193/2023 P.S. Bhelupur,
Varanasi |
FIR No. 50/2023 P.S. Chetganj,
Varanasi |
|
1. |
Santosh Sao |
On Bail Vide order dt. 13.12.2023 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 47159/2023. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 09.11.2023 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 42631/2023. |
N.A. |
|
2. |
Jagveer Baranwal |
On Bail Vide order dt. 15.02.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 50911/2023. |
On Bail Vide order dated 12.02.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 54874/2023. |
N.A. |
|
3. |
Santosh Gupta @Santosh Modanwal |
On Bail Vide order dt. 06.05.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 16387/2024. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 20.05.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 19579/2024. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 19.06.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 18846/2024. |
|
4. |
Gudiya Devi |
On Bail Vide order dt. 07.12.2023 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 46240/2023. |
Re-arrested on 20.02.2025 NB W issued vide order dt.
17.02.2025 by CJM in Crl. Case No. 93745/2023. Bail order set aside by this
Court in SLP (Crl.) No. 1042/2024 vide order dated 24.09.2024. |
N.A. |
|
5. |
Anuradha Devi |
On Bail Vide order dt. 30.01.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 50428/2023. |
Re-arrested on 20.02.2025 NB W issued vide order dt.
17.02.2025 by CJM in Crl. Case No. 93745/2023. Bail order set aside by this
Court in SLP (Crl.) No. |
N.A. |
|
|
|
|
1046/2024 vide order dated
24.09.2024. |
|
|
6. |
Manish Jain |
On Bail Vide order dt. 27.02.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 291/2024. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 21.11.2023 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 47898/2023. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 27.05.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 17559/2024. |
|
7. |
Nandlal Ram |
On Bail Vide order dt. 14.03.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 42319/2023. |
N.A. |
N.A. |
|
8. |
Kuldeep Paswan @Kuldeep Ram |
On Bail Vide order dt. 25.04.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 51046/2023. |
N.A. |
N.A. |
|
9. |
Sanjay Modanwal |
N.A. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 12.08.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 18231/2024. |
N.A. |
|
10. |
Shivam Gupta @Praveen Modanwal |
On Bail Vide order dt. 26.07.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 25766/2024. |
Order granting bail has not
been challenged. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 18.07.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 26287/2024. |
|
11. |
Mahesh Rana |
N.A. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 07.02.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 51016/2023. |
N.A. |
|
12. |
Yashoda Devi Pandit |
N.A. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 04.01.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 53108/2023 |
N.A. |
|
13. |
Mukesh Pandit |
N.A. |
On Bail Vide order dt. 16.02.2024 in
Crl. Misc. Bail Appl. No. 53348/2023 |
N.A. |
|
14. |
Sunita Devi |
N.A. |
Order granting bail set aside
by this Court in SLP (Crl.) No. 1041/2024 vide order dt. 24.09.2024. |
N.A. |
|
15. |
Mahesh Rana |
N.A. |
Order granting bail set aside
by this Court in SLP (Crl.) No. 1044/2024 vide order dt. 24 09 2024. |
N.A. |
|
16. |
Sangeeta Devi |
Order granting Bail has not
been challenged. |
Re-arrested on 03.03.2025 NB W issued vide order dt.
17.02.2025 by CJM in Crl. Case No. 93745/2023. Bail order set aside by this
Court in SLP (Crl.) No. 1045/2024 vide order dated 24.09.2024. |
N.A. |
D.
ORDER PASSED BY COORDINATE BENCH IN CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 3997 OF 2024 AND ALLIED
APPEALS CANCELLING THE BAIL GRANTED TO SOME OF THE ACCUSED PERSONS.
37. The order reads thus: -
"ORDER
1.
Leave granted.
2.
Heard Ms. Aparna Bhat, learned senior counsel appearing for the appellant
(informant). Also heard Mr. Garvesh Kabra, learned counsel appearing for the
respondent - State of Uttar Pradesh.
3. The
office report dated 23.09.2024 indicates that service is complete on the
accused (respondent No. 2) in all the cases but none has entered their
appearance.
4.
These matters arise out of the common FIR No. 193 of 2023 registered under
Section 363 of the IPC relating to the appellant's 4 year old son, who went
missing at night. The Police after some investigation noticed that it was a
child trafficking case and accordingly added Section 370 (5) of the IPC.
Subsequently, chargesheet against 14 accused was filed under Sections 363, 311
and 370(5) of the IPC. The unofficial respondents herein are named as accused
in the chargesheet.
5.
While challenging the bail orders passed on 04.10.2023, 08.11.2023, 09.11.2023,
12.12.2023 and 15.12.2023, Ms. Aparna Bhat, learned senior counsel submits that
these are organised child trafficking cases and the bail for the accused was
unmerited.
6. In
the counter affidavit filed by the State, it is pointed out that these cases
pertain to child trafficking racket involving kidnapping and selling of minor
children. The activities of the accused spread across the States of Uttar
Pradesh, Jharkhand and Rajasthan. The affidavit also indicates the nature of
evidence that has been collected by the Police and it is averred that those
will show the complicity of accused.
7. The
punishment envisaged in the event of conviction for the charged sections is
minimum 14 years which can extend upto life imprisonment. Notwithstanding the
serious nature of the crime as also the likely involvement of the accused in
the child trafficking racket, we notice from the impugned order(s) that the
High Court without considering the relevant parameters in cases of this nature,
granted bail to the accused.
8. The
concerned accused despite service have failed to appear in Court to defend the
bail order.
9. We
are therefore of the considered opinion that the bail order(s) requires our
interference. Accordingly, the impugned orders of the High Court dated
04.10.2023, 08.11.2023, 09.11.2023, 12.12.2023 and 15.12.2023 granting bail to
the accused Gudiya Devi, Mahesh Rana, Santosh Saw, Sangeeta Devi, Anuradha Devi
& Sunita Devi are set aside and quashed. The appeals are allowed. As the
bail is being cancelled, all the accused must immediately surrender. If they do
not do so, the Police must take steps to arrest the accused. It is ordered
accordingly.
10. Pending application(s), if
any, shall stand disposed of.
(Emphasis
supplied)
E. GRANT OF BAIL BY THE HIGH
COURT
38. We take notice of the fact
that practically in all the cases the High Court while releasing the accused
persons on bail took into consideration the following aspects: -
i) The
accused has not been named in the FIR;
ii) The
name of the accused has been disclosed by a co-accused;
iii)
Victim has not been recovered from the custody of the accused;
iv)
Similarly situated co-accused has been granted bail;
v) No
material evidence regarding tampering of evidence or intimidating of witness in
previous criminal cases; vi) Bail is a rule, jail is an exception.
F. SUBMISSIONS OF THE PARTIES
i. Submissions on behalf of the
Appellants.
39. Ms. Aparna Bhat, the learned
counsel appearing for the victims/appellants vehemently submitted that the High
Court committed a serious error in releasing the accused persons on bail by
completely undermining the serious nature of the crime alleged. She would
submit that the High Court failed to consider an important aspect of the matter
that the FIRs were registered as cases of missing children. How does the High
Court expect precise details in the FIRs? She would submit that the recovery
memos indicate the manner in which the investigation was conducted and how each
accused not only led the investigation agency to apprehend the other accused
but also led to retrieval of the children. She brought to our notice that each
child was found from the home/custody of one or the other accused persons.
40. Ms. Aparna Bhat brought
something very shocking to our notice. As an illustration Ms. Bhat pointed out
that the respondent no. 2 in SLP(CRL.) 4667 of 2025, namely, Anuradha Devi is a
nurse serving in a primary health centre at Hazari Bagh Chhattisgarh.
Similarly, the respondent no. 2 in SLP (CRL.) 4668 of 2025 and SLP (CRL.) 4660
of 2025 respectively, namely, Jagveer Baranwal is also directly involved in
child trafficking. At least four of the trafficked children were retrieved at
their instances from the persons to whom they had sold the children.
41. Ms. Bhat would submit that if
such individuals are granted bail they would return to the place of their work
and continue indulging in such nefarious activities which constitute a very
serious crime.
42. In such circumstances
referred to above, Ms. Bhat prayed that there being merit in all her appeals
those may be allowed and the orders passed by the High Court granting bail to
the accused persons be set aside and they should be ordered to be taken back in
custody.
ii. Submissions on behalf of
accused persons; Santosh Sao and Jagveer Baranwal.
43. Ms. Tanya Agarwal, the
learned counsel appearing for one of the accused persons, namely, Santosh Sao
submitted that her client cannot be said to be one of the members of the gang
operating for the purpose of human trafficking. She would submit that her
client is a poor man residing in a small village in the State of Jharkhand. He
is a father of four daughters (aged between 16 years - 3 years). The counsel
would submit that her client is the sole bread earner of the family. It was
argued that the accused Santosh Sao has no role to play either in kidnapping or
selling. She further argued that the trafficked child was not found from the
custody of her client but was found from the custody of one Nand Lal Ram.
According to the learned counsel the name of her client came to be disclosed at
the instance of one co-accused, namely, Anuradha Devi.
44. Ms. Agarwal further submitted
that her client is very much available for trial. His whereabouts are very much
known to the police and he is regularly attending the trial court.
45. In such circumstances
referred to above, Ms. Agarwal prayed that the bail of her client may not be
cancelled.
iii. Submissions on behalf of
accused; Manish Jain.
46. Ms. Sangeeta Singh, the
learned counsel appearing for one of the accused persons, namely, Manish Jain
submitted that the High Court committed no error much less any error of law in
ordering release of her client on bail. She would submit that no child was
retrieved from her client and the entire case against her client is based on
the statements of the other co-accused. In this regard she pointed out the
following: -
"Bail
granted on 27.02.2024 in Cri.Misc. BailApp. No. 201/2024 in FIR No. 201/2023.
Bail
granted in Crl.Misc. BailApp. No. 47898 of 2023 in FIR No. 193/2023 on
21.11.2023.
Bail
granted in Crl.Misc. Bail App. No. 17559/2024 in FIR No. 50/2023 on
27.05.2024."
47. She further submitted that
cancellation of bail is prayed for at the instance of the first informant and
not by the State. According to her, the first informant has personal vengeance
to wreck against her client.
48. In such circumstances, the
learned counsel prayed that no case is made out by the first informant for the
purpose of cancellation of bail of the accused, namely, Manish Jain and
therefore, the orders passed by the High Court releasing Manish Jain on bail
may not be disturbed.
iv. Submissions on behalf of the
State.
49. Mr. Garvesh Kabra, the
learned counsel appearing for the State of U.P. adopted all the submissions
canvassed by Ms. Aparna Bhat appearing for the appellants. He submitted after
obtaining instructions from the concerned courts below as well as the
investigation officers that the whereabouts of most of the accused persons are
not known as on date. He pointed out that after being released on bail many of
the accused persons have absconded and are not appearing before the courts
below for the purpose of committal proceedings.
G. ANALYSIS
50. Having heard the learned
counsel appearing for the parties and having gone through materials on record the
only question that falls for our consideration is whether the High Court
committed any error in passing various orders releasing the accused persons on
bail?
51. In Bachpan Bachao and Ors v.
UOI and Ors. reported in 2010 SCC OnLine Del 4613, A.K. Sikri, J. (as His
Lordship then was) speaking for the Bench observed that: -
"17.
Trafficking in women and children is the gravest form of abuse and exploitation
of human beings. Thousands of Indians are trafficked everyday to some
destination or the other and are forced to lead lives of slavery. They are
forced to survive in brothels, factories, guesthouses, dance bars, farms and
even in the homes of well-off Indians, with no control over their bodies and
lives. The Indian Constitution specifically bans the trafficking of persons.
Article 23, in the Fundamental Rights, Part III of the Constitution, prohibits
"traffic in human beings and other similar forms of forced labour".
Though there is no concrete definition of trafficking, it could be said that
trafficking necessarily involves movement/transportation, of a person by means
of coercion or deceit, and consequent exploitation leading to
commercialization. The abusers, including the traffickers, the recruiters, the
transporters, the sellers, the buyers, the end-users etc., exploit the
vulnerability of the trafficked person. Trafficking shows phenomenal increase
with globalization. Increasing profit with little or no risk, organized
activities, low priority in law enforcement etc., aggravate the situation. The
income generated by trafficking is comparable to the money generated through
trafficking in arms and drugs. Trafficking in human beings take place for the
purpose of exploitation which in general could be categorized as (a) Sex-based
and (b) Non-sex-based. The former category includes trafficking for
prostitution, Commercial sexual abuse, paedophilia, pornography, cyber sex, and
different types of disguised sexual exploitation that take place in some of the
massage parlours, beauty parlours, bars, and other manifestations like call
girl racket, friendship clubs, etc. Non sex based trafficking could be for
different types of servitude, like domestic labour, industrial labour,
adoption, organ transplant, camel racing, marriage related rackets etc. But the
growing trafficking in women is principally for the purpose of prostitution.
Prostitution is an international problem. However, we are aware of the fact
that it is legalized in many countries around the globe. Unfortunately, society
remains tolerant of this abominable crime against women. There are assorted
ways of getting women into prostitution that are common to many countries; then
there are particular unique methods varies to a country. Probably, the three
most common methods are false employment promises, false marriages and
kidnapping. But what makes women and girls vulnerable are economic distress,
desertion by their spouses, sexually exploitative social customs and family
traditions. In a recent survey in India, prostituted women cited the following
reasons for their remaining in the trade, reasons that have been echoed in all
the concerned countries. In descending order of significance, they are: poverty
and unemployment; lack of proper reintegration services, lack of options;
stigma and adverse social attitudes; family expectations and pressure;
resignation and acclimatization to the lifestyle. The two principal Indian laws
that addresses the trafficking and prostitution in particular are the Suppression
of Immoral Traffic in Women and Girls Act, 1956 (SITA) and the Immoral Traffic
(Prevention) Act, 1986 (ITPA), colloquially called PITA, and amendment to SITA.
Neither law prohibits prostitution per se, but both forbids commercialized vice
and soliciting.
18.
India is said to have adopted a tolerant approach to prostitution whereby an
individual is free to carry on prostitution provided it is not an organized and
a commercialized vice. However, it commits itself to opposing trafficking as
enshrined in Article 23 of the Constitution which prohibits trafficking in
human beings. India is also a signatory to international conventions such as
the Convention on Rights of the Child (1989), Convention on Elimination of all
forms of Discrimination Against Women (1979), UN Protocol to Prevent, Suppress
and Punish Trafficking in Persons, especially Women and Children (2000) and the
latest South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) Convention on
Preventing and Combating Trafficking in Women and Children for Prostitution
(2002). A trafficked victim is, therefore, a victim of multiplicity of crimes,
and extreme form of abuse and violation of human rights. The constitution of
India, under Article 23 specifically prohibits trafficking in human beings. At present,
the legal regime to trafficking of women and children for commercial sexual
exploitation includes the following:
A)
Indian Penal Code, 1960;
B)
ITPA, 1956;
C) J.J.
Act, 2000;
D)
Special laws of various states;
E)
Rulings of Supreme Court and High Court. "
52. His Lordship went on to
further observe:
"19.
There may be various problems while dealing with the issue of
"trafficking". These petitioners seek to highlight limited facets of
children being compelled to perform in circus and illegal trafficking in
children and failure on the part of the law enforcement agencies as well as the
society to protect the fundamental rights of the children. The Government had
itself admitted the seriousness of the problem. The report prepared by Mr.
Gopal Subramanium, learned Solicitor General of India and submitted in Bachpan
Bachao petition, it is sated that the trafficking in human beings is not a new
phenomenon. Women, children and men have been captured, bought and sold in
market places for decades. Human trafficking is one of the most lucrative
criminal activities. Estimates of the United Nations state that 1 to 4 million
people are trafficked worldwide each year. Trafficking in women and children is
an operation which is worth more than $10 billion annually. The NHRC Committee
on Missing Children has the following statistics to offer:
(a)
12.6 million (Governmental sources) a 100 million (unofficial sources) stated
to be child labour;
(b)
44,000 children are reported missing annually, of which 11,000 get traced;
(c)
About 200 girls and women enter prostitution daily, of which 20% are below 15
years of age.
International
conventions exist to punish and suppress trafficking especially against women
and children [Ref: UN Protocol to
Prevent,
Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons also referred as the Palermo
Protocol on Trafficking.] Trafficking is now defined as an organized crime
against humanity. The convention being an international convention is limited
to cross border trafficking but does not address trafficking within the
country. The definition of trafficking is significant:
"[...]
The recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons by
means of threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of
fraud, of deception, of the abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or
of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a
person having control over another person, for the purpose of exploitation
[...]"
It is
further submitted by the learned Solicitor General that children under 18 years
of age cannot give a valid consent. It is further submitted that any
recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of children for
the purpose of exploitation is a form of trafficking regardless of the means
used. Three significant elements constitute trafficking:
(a) The
action involving recruitment and transportation;
(b) The
means employed such as force, coercion, fraud or deception including abuse of
power and bribes; and
(c) The
preliminary purpose being of exploitation including prostitution, etc.
Internationally,
there is a working definition of child trafficking. The working definition is
clear because it incorporates the above three elements. In June 2001, India has
adopted the PALERMO Protocol to evolve its working definition of child
trafficking. The forms and purposes of child trafficking may be : -
(a)
Bonded labour;
(b)
Domestic work;
(c)
Agricultural labour;
(d)
Employment in construction activity;
(e)
Carpet industry;
(f)
Garment industry;
(g)
Fish/shrimp export;
(h) Other sites of work in the
formal and informal economy.
Trafficking
can also be for illegal activities such as : -
(a)
Begging;
(b)
Organ trade;
(c)
Drug peddling and smuggling.
Trafficking can be for sexual
exploitation, i.e.
(a)
Forced prostitution;
(b)Socially
and religiously sanctified forms of prostitution;
(c) Sex
tourism;
(d)
Pornography.
Child trafficking can be to aid
entertainment in sports : -
(a)
Circus/dance troupes;
(b)
Camel jockeying.
Some
problem of "trafficking" is highlighted only to show the plight of
children and women, who are taken as domestic help by dubious placement
agencies and forced them into flesh trade.
20.
Coming back to the medium of placement agencies, poverty and lack of
opportunity are major foundation of trafficking. Child trafficking typically
begins with a private arrangement between a trafficker and a family member,
driven by the family economic plight and the trafficker's desire for profit and
cheap labour. Someone comes along and says he or she has professions or jobs
for the children and the parents believe it. Parents think that in letting
children go they are doing something good for them; but someone takes them as
and makes them domestic workers, and someone else takes all the money instead
of giving them a salary. Some crimes that are commonly concurrent with child
trafficking, or which child trafficking may initially appear to be are:
A)
Domestic violence;
B)
Child abuse or neglect;
C)
Child sexual abuse;
D)
Child pornography;
E)
Child labour violations. "
i. Broad Principles for Grant of
Bail.
53. In Gudikanti Narasimhulu and
Others v. Public Prosecutor, High Court ofAndhra Pradesh reported in (1978) 1
SCC 240, Krishna Iyer, J., while elaborating on the content of Article 21 of
the Constitution of India in the context of personal liberty of a person under
trial, has laid down the key factors that should be considered while granting
bail, which are extracted as under: -
"7.
It is thus obvious that the nature of the charge is the vital factor and the
nature of the evidence also is pertinent. The punishment to which the party may
be liable, if convicted or conviction is confirmed, also bears upon the issue.
8.
Another relevant factor is as to whether the course of justice would be
thwarted by him who seeks the benignant jurisdiction of the Court to be freed
for the time being [Patrick Devlin, The Criminal Prosecution in England (Oxford
University Press, London 1960) p. 75— Modern Law Review, Vol. 81, Jan. 1968, p.
54.]
9. Thus
the legal principles and practice validate the Court considering the likelihood
of the applicant interfering with witnesses for the prosecution or otherwise
polluting the process of justice. It is not only traditional but rational, in
this context, to enquire into the antecedents of a man who is applying for bail
to find whether he has a bad record —particularly a record which suggests that
he is likely to commit serious offences while on bail. In regard to habituals,
it is part of criminological history that a thoughtless bail order has enabled
the bailee to exploit the opportunity to inflict further crimes on the members
of society. Bail discretion, on the basis of evidence about the criminal record
of a defendant, is therefore not an exercise in irrelevance."
(Emphasis
supplied)
54. In Prahlad Singh Bhati v.
NCT, Delhi & Anr. reported in (2001) 4 SCC 280, this Court highlighted
various aspects that the courts should keep in mind while dealing with an
application seeking bail. The same may be extracted as follows: -
"8.
The jurisdiction to grant bail has to be exercised on the basis of well-settled
principles having regard to the circumstances of each case and not in an
arbitrary manner. While granting the bail, the court has to keep in mind the
nature of accusations, the nature of evidence in support thereof, the severity
of the punishment which conviction will entail, the character, behaviour, means
and standing of the accused, circumstances which are peculiar to the accused,
reasonable possibility of securing the presence of the accused at the trial,
reasonable apprehension of the witnesses being tampered with, the larger
interests of the public or State and similar other considerations. It has also
to be kept in mind that for the purposes of granting the bail the Legislature
has used the words "reasonable grounds for believing" instead of "the
evidence" which means the court dealing with the grant of bail can only
satisfy it (sic itself) as to whether there is a genuine case against the
accused and that the prosecution will be able to produce prima facie evidence
in support of the charge. [...]"
(Emphasis
supplied)
55. This Court in Ram Govind
Upadhyay v. Sudarshan Singh reported in (2002) 3 SCC 598, speaking through
Banerjee, J., emphasised that a court exercising discretion in matters of bail,
has to undertake the same judiciously. In highlighting that bail should not be
granted as a matter of course, bereft of cogent reasoning, this Court observed
as follows: -
"3.
Grant of bail though being a discretionary order — but, however, calls for
exercise of such a discretion in a judicious manner and not as a matter of
course. Order for bail bereft of any cogent reason cannot be sustained.
Needless to record, however, that the grant of bail is dependent upon the
contextual facts of the matter being dealt with by the court and facts,
however, do always vary from case to case. While placement of the accused in
the society, though may be considered but that by itself cannot be a guiding
factor in the matter of grant of bail and the same should and ought always to
be coupled with other circumstances warranting the grant of bail. The nature of
the offence is one of the basic considerations for the grant of bail — more
heinous is the crime, the greater is the chance of rejection of the bail,
though, however, dependent on the factual matrix of the matter."
(Emphasis
supplied)
56. In Kalyan Chandra Sarkar v.
Rajesh Ranjan reported in (2004) 7 SCC 528, this Court held that although it is
established that a court considering a bail application cannot undertake a
detailed examination of evidence and an elaborate discussion on the merits of
the case, yet the court is required to indicate the prima facie reasons
justifying the grant of bail.
57. In Prasanta Kumar Sarkar v.
Ashis Chatterjee reported in (2010) 14 SCC 496, this Court observed that where
a High Court has granted bail mechanically, the said order would suffer from
the vice of non-application of mind, rendering it illegal. This Court held as
under with regard to the circumstances under which an order granting bail may
be set aside. In doing so, the factors which ought to have guided the Court's
decision to grant bail have also been detailed as under: -
"9.
[...] It is trite that this Court does not, normally, interfere with an order
passed by the High Court granting or rejecting bail to the accused. However, it
is equally incumbent upon the High Court to exercise its discretion
judiciously, cautiously and strictly in compliance with the basic principles
laid down in a plethora of decisions of this Court on the point. It is well
settled that, among other circumstances, the factors to be borne in mind while
considering an application for bail are:
(i)
whether there is any prima facie or reasonable ground to believe that the
accused had committed the offence;
(ii)
nature and gravity of the accusation;
(iii)
severity of the punishment in the event of conviction;
(iv)
danger of the accused absconding or fleeing, if released on bail;
(v)
character, behaviour, means, position and standing of the accused;
(vi)
likelihood of the offence being repeated;
(vii)
reasonable apprehension of the witnesses being influenced; and
(viii)
danger, of course, of justice being thwarted by grant of bail. "
(Emphasis
supplied)
58. In Bhoopendra Singh v. State
of Rajasthan reported in (2021) 17 SCC 220, this Court made observations with
respect to the exercise of appellate power to determine whether bail has been
granted for valid reasons as distinguished from an application for cancellation
of bail i.e. this Court distinguished between setting aside a perverse order granting
bail vis-àvis cancellation of bail on the ground that the accused has
misconducted himself or because of some new facts requiring such cancellation.
Quoting Mahipal v. Rajesh Kumar reported in (2020) 2 SCC 118, this Court
observed as under: -
"16.
The considerations that guide the power of an appellate court in assessing the
correctness of an order granting bail stand on a different footing from an
assessment of an application for the cancellation of bail. The correctness of
an order granting bail is tested on the anvil of whether there was an improper
or arbitrary exercise of the discretion in the grant of bail. The test is
whether the order granting bail is perverse, illegal or unjustified. On the
other hand, an application for cancellation of bail is generally examined on
the anvil of the existence of supervening circumstances or violations of the
conditions of bail by a person to whom bail has been granted. [...]"
(Emphasis
supplied)
59. One of the judgments of this
Court on the aspect of application of mind and requirement of judicious
exercise of discretion in arriving at an order granting bail to the accused is
Brijmani Devi v. Pappu Kumar reported in (2022) 4 SCC 497, wherein a
three-Judge Bench of this Court, while setting aside an unreasoned and casual
order [Pappu Kumar v. State of Bihar reported in (2021) SCC OnLine Pat 2856 and
Pappu Singh v. State of Bihar reported in (2021) SCC OnLine Pat 2857] of the
High Court granting bail to the accused, observed as follows: -
"35.
While we are conscious of the fact that liberty of an individual is an
invaluable right, at the same time while considering an application for bail
courts cannot lose sight of the serious nature of the accusations against an
accused and the facts that have a bearing in the case, particularly, when the
accusations may not be false, frivolous or vexatious in nature but are
supported by adequate material brought on record so as to enable a court to
arrive at a prima facie conclusion. While considering an application for grant
of bail a prima facie conclusion must be supported by reasons and must be
arrived at after having regard to the vital facts of the case brought on
record. Due consideration must be given to facts suggestive of the nature of
crime, the criminal antecedents of the accused, if any, and the nature of
punishment that would follow a conviction vis-à-vis the offence(s) alleged
against an accused."
(Emphasis
supplied)
60. In Manoj Kumar Khokhar v.
State of Rajasthan and Another reported in (2022) 3 SCC 501, Her Ladyship B. V.
Nagarathna, J, speaking for the Bench observed as under:
"37.
Ultimately, the court considering an application for bail has to exercise
discretion in a judicious manner and in accordance with the settled principles
of law having regard to the crime alleged to be committed by the accused on the
one hand and ensuring purity of the trial of the case on the other.
38.
Thus, while elaborate reasons may not be assigned for grant of bail or an
extensive discussion of the merits of the case may not be undertaken by the
court considering a bail application, an order dehors reasoning or bereft of
the relevant reasons cannot result in grant of bail. In such a case the
prosecution or the informant has a right to assail the order before a higher
forum. As noted in Gurcharan Singh v. State (Delhi Admn.) [Gurcharan Singh v.
State (Delhi Admn.), (1978) 1 SCC 118 : 1978 SCC (Cri) 41 : 1978 Cri LJ129],
when bail has been granted to an accused, the State may, if new circumstances
have arisen following the grant of such bail, approach the High Court seeking
cancellation of bail under Section 439(2) CrPC. However, if no new
circumstances have cropped up since the grant of bail, the State may prefer an
appeal against the order granting bail, on the ground that the same is perverse
or illegal or has been arrived at by ignoring material aspects which establish
a prima facie case against the accused. "
(Emphasis
supplied)
61. We have referred to the above
authorities solely for the purpose of reiterating two conceptual principles,
namely, factors that are to be taken into consideration while exercising power
of admitting an accused to bail when offences are of serious nature, and the
distinction between cancellation of bail because of supervening circumstances
and exercise of jurisdiction in nullifying an order granting bail in an appeal
when the bail order is assailed on the ground that the same is perverse or
based on irrelevant considerations or founded on non-consideration of the
factors which are relevant.
62. We are absolutely conscious
that liberty of a person should not be lightly dealt with, for deprivation of
liberty of a person has immense impact on the mind of a person. Incarceration
creates a concavity in the personality of an individual. Sometimes it causes a
sense of vacuum. Needless to emphasise, the sacrosanctity of liberty is
paramount in a civilised society. However, in a democratic body polity which is
wedded to the rule of law an individual is expected to grow within the social
restrictions sanctioned by law. The individual liberty is restricted by larger
social interest and its deprivation must have due sanction of law. In an
orderly society an individual is expected to live with dignity having respect
for law and also giving due respect to others' rights. It is a well-accepted
principle that the concept of liberty is not in the realm of absolutism but is
a restricted one. The cry of the collective for justice, its desire for peace
and harmony and its necessity for security cannot be allowed to be trivialised.
The life of an individual living in a society governed by the rule of law has
to be regulated and such regulations which are the source in law subserve the
social balance and function as a significant instrument for protection of human
rights and security of the collective. This is because, fundamentally, laws are
made for their obedience so that every member of the society lives peacefully
in a society to achieve his individual as well as social interest. That is why
Edmond Burke while discussing about liberty opined, "it is regulated
freedom".
63. It is also to be kept in mind
that individual liberty cannot be accentuated to such an extent or elevated to
such a high pedestal which would bring in anarchy or disorder in the society.
The prospect of greater justice requires that law and order should prevail in a
civilised milieu. True it is, there can be no arithmetical formula for fixing
the parameters in precise exactitude but the adjudication should express not
only application of mind but also exercise of jurisdiction on accepted and
established norms. Law and order in a society protect the established precepts
and see to it that contagious crimes do not become epidemic. In an organised
society the concept of liberty basically requires citizens to be responsible
and not to disturb the tranquillity and safety which every well-meaning person
desires. Not for nothing J. Oerter stated: "Personal liberty is the right
to act without interference within the limits of the law."
64. Thus analysed, it is clear
that though liberty is a greatly cherished value in the life of an individual,
it is a controlled and restricted one and no element in the society can act in
a manner by consequence of which the life or liberty of others is jeopardised,
for the rational collective does not countenance an anti-social or
anti-collective act. [See: Ash Mohammad v. Shiv Raj Singh, reported in (2012) 9
SCC 446].
65. The newspaper "Times of
India", in its Delhi Edition dated 14.04.2025 has reported something
extremely shocking and painful. The news item reads thus:
"Stolen
at birth, sold for lakhs: Trafficking racket busted in city
TIMES
NEWS NETWORK
New
Delhi: A gang of alleged child traffickers involved in the abduction and sale
of new-borns in different states has been busted by the police. Three
individuals, including two women, were arrested in connection with the case,
and two infants-one just four to five days old-were rescued.
According
to police, the gang operated across state lines, targeting remote villages and
hospitals in Rajasthan and Gujarat. Newborns, some barely days old, were stolen
and then kept in slum areas around Delhi before being sold to childless couples
for sums ranging from Rs. 5 to Rs. 10 lakh.
So far,
police believe the gang trafficked at last 35 infants into Delhi. Efforts are
underway to trace the origins of the rescued children and locate their
biological parents.
The
breakthrough came on April 8, when the special staff team of Dwarka district
received a tip off about an infant being allegedly sold in Uttam Nagar.
"Acting swiftly, police reached the location near Uttam Nagar East Metro
Station and found a silver car parked on the roadside. Inside, a newborn was
found crying uncontrollably in the sweltering heat, suffering from
Police
arrest three suspects on the spot-Yasmin (30) from Mohan Garden, Anjali (36)
from Malviya Nagar, and Jitender (47) from Madangir. A woman constable quickly
took
A
SENIOR COP SAYS Cops reached the location and found a silver car parked on the
roadside. Inside, a newborn was found crying uncontrollably in the sweltering
heat, suffering from hunger and dehydration the baby in her arms, comforting
the infant, before rushing him to a hospital, where doctors said the child was
only a few days old.
Police
said Yasmin brought the baby from the slums of Krishna Colony, claiming the
infant was transported from Gujarat. Anjali arrived to collect the child and
make the payment, while Jitender was driving the vehicle. The deal, worth Rs. 5
lakh was to be finalised upon delivery of the baby. Police said Anjali had
earlier been arrested by CBI in a similar case of human trafficking.
Based
on information provided by Yasmin during interrogation, a second baby was
located and rescued. Cops are now working to identify the infants' parents and
uncover the full extent of the gang's operations.
Preliminary
investigation suggests that the gang had a widespread network not only in slums
but also in some upscale neighbourhoods of Delhi. Sources indicate that some
medical professionals may also be complicit in the racket, hunger and
dehydration, " a senior police officer said, adding, "Ignoring the
child's desperate cries, the occupants of the vehicle were allegedly busy
negotiating the sale." helping connect the gang to potential buyers.
Police
have taken the accused into custody and are conducting searches in Rajasthan
and Gujarat to gather more evidence."
66. Thus, it appears that a huge
gang is dangerously operating within & outside Delhi and is selling
trafficked infants and children in different States for sums ranging from Rs.
5,00,000/- to 10,00,000/-. It also appears from the reporting that some of the
accused persons who have been arrested are habitual offenders. The report says
that one Anjali who had been earlier arrested by CBI in a similar case of human
trafficking is said to be involved in the present incident.
H. CONCLUSION
67. Considering the serious
nature of the crime and the modus operandi adopted by the accused persons we
are of the view that the High Court should not have exercised its discretion in
favour of the accused persons. We are sorry to say but the High Court dealt
with all the bail applications in a very callous manner. The outcome of this
callous approach on the part of the High Court has ultimately paved way for
many accused persons to abscond and thereby put the trial in jeopardy. These
accused persons are a big threat to the society wherever they are in the
country. They have exhibited a tendency of committing a particular nature of
crime, namely, child trafficking. The least that was expected of the High Court
while granting bail to all the accused persons was to impose a condition on
each of them to mark their presence once in a week at the concerned police
station so that the police can keep a check over the movements of all the
accused persons. All that the High Court did was to direct the accused persons
to remain present before the trial court. In none of the impugned orders there
is a condition of marking presence at the concerned police station as a result,
the police lost track of all these accused persons.
68. We are thoroughly
disappointed with the manner in which the State handled the situation. Why did
the State not do anything for all this period of time? Why did the State not
deem fit to challenge the orders of bail passed by the High Court? The State
unfortunately has exhibited no seriousness worth the name.
69. The accused, namely, Santosh
Sao claims to be a poor man and a father of four minor daughters.
Unfortunately, the role ascribed to Santosh Sao is also very dubious. It
appears prima facie that Santosh Sao was longing for a son and he went to the
extent of purchasing a trafficked minor male child, named, Sunny Nishad. The
case against him is that he bought the male child from two co-accused, namely,
Jagveer Baranwal and Anuradha Devi for Rs. 4,00,000/-. We are of the view that
Santosh Sao is equally responsible. He may not be directly involved in actual
kidnapping of the minor male child but at the same time prima facie knowledge
could definitely be imputed to him that the minor child he was purchasing for
Rs. 4,00,000/- was a trafficked child. The desire of Santosh Sao is one of the
unfortunate illustrations of the evil that men do. The extent to which people
go to have a male child. They do not hesitate to purchase a trafficked child at
the cost of causing pain, agony and immense trauma to the biological parents of
the trafficked child.
70. So far as the accused,
namely, Manish Jain is concerned, he appears to be one of the kingpins in the
entire racket. The case against him is that he is one of the key players in the
organized interstate child trafficking racket. There is prima facie evidence on
record to indicate that he actively managed the illegal operations,
coordinating the sale and purchase of trafficked children across regions. He
alongwith two co-accused, namely, Vinay Mishra & Shikha Devi is alleged to
have been frequently working for the purpose of trafficking minors and selling
them for huge amount. It is alleged that between March and April, 2023 he sold
multiple trafficked children for the amount ranging between Rs. 40,000/- and
Rs. 2,60,000/-
71. Although the learned counsel
appearing for Jagveer Baranwal vehemently submitted that her client has nothing
to do with any hospital nor he is serving as a male nurse in the hospital, yet
the evidence on record indicates more than prima facie his involvement in
collusion with the nurse, namely, Anuradha Devi. There is evidence on record to
prima facie indicate that the police was able to retrieve one of the trafficked
child directly from the custody of the Jagveer Baranwal. The child was found
from the custody of Jagveer Baranwal at a point of time when Jagveer and his
accomplices were negotiating for the sale of the said child.
72. Modern political scientist
and philosopher, also favours certain limitation on liberty, for safeguarding
the societal interest and professes the proportionality between the liberty and
restriction, thus laying down exception for the personal liberty, in following
words:
"Men
are qualified for civil liberty in exact proportion to their disposition to put
moral chains upon their own appetites, in proportion as their love to justice
is above their rapacity, in proportion as their soundness and sobriety of
understanding is above their vanity and presumption, in proportion as they are
more disposed to listen to the counsels of the wise and good, in preference to
the flattery of knaves. Society cannot exist, unless a controlling power upon
will and appetite be placed somewhere; and the less of it there is within, the
more there must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of
things, that men of intemperate minds cannot be free. Their passions forge
their fetters. "[John C. Nimmo, The
Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke: A Letter to a Member of the
National Assembly, vol. 4 (London).]
(Emphasis
supplied)
73. Thus, certain restrictions or
limitations, on the exercise of personal liberty, by the State or other such
human agency, are necessary elements, in the interest of liberty of a
well-ordered society or societal interest.
[Quentin Skinner, The Paradoxes of Liberty, The Tanner Lectures on Human
Values, Harvard Univ., Oct. 24-25, 1984.]
74. This Court has also held that
unlimited and unqualified liberty cannot be said to be in favour of societal
interest. In Kartar Singh v. State of Punjab reported in (1994) 3 SCC 569, this
Court observed:
"Liberty
cannot stand alone but must be paired with companion virtue i.e. virtue and
morality, liberty and law, liberty and justice, liberty and common good,
liberty and responsibility which are concomitants for orderly progress and
social stability. Man being a rationale individual has to live in harmony with
equal rights of others and more differently for the attainment of antithetic
desires. This intertwined network is difficult to delineate within defined
spheres of conduct within which freedom of action may be confined. Therefore,
liberty would not always be an absolute licence but must arm itself within the
confines of law. In other words, there can be no liberty without social
restraint. Liberty, therefore, as a social conception is a right to be assured
to all members of a society. Unless restraint is enforced on and accepted by
all members of the society, the liberty of some must involve the oppression of
others. If liberty be regarded a social order, the problem of establishing
liberty must be a problem of organising restraint which society controls over
the individual. Therefore, liberty of each citizen is borne of and must be
subordinated to the liberty of the greatest number, in other words common
happiness as an end of the society, lest lawlessness and anarchy will tamper
social weal and harmony and powerful courses or forces would be at work to
undermine social welfare and order. Thus the essence of civil liberty is to
keep alive the freedom of the individual subject to the limitation of social
control which could be adjusted according to the needs of the dynamic social
evolution."
(Emphasis
supplied)
75. In Gudikanti Narasimhulu
(supra) this Court observed thus: -
"After
all, personal liberty of an accused or convict is fundamental, suffering lawful
eclipse only in terms of 'procedure established by law'. The last four words of
Art. 21 are the life of that human right. The doctrine of Police Power
constitutionally validates punitive processes for the maintenance of public
order, security of the State, national integrity and the interest of the public
generally. Even so, having regard to the solemn issue involved, deprivation of
personal freedom, ephemeral or enduring, must be founded on the most serious
considerations relevant to the welfare objectives of society, specified in the
Constitution."
(Emphasis
supplied)
76. In no circumstances, the High
Court could have released Santosh Sao, Jagveer Baranwal & Manish Jain
respectively on bail.
77. In such circumstances
referred to above, we are of the view that we should set aside all the orders
passed by the High Court granting bail to the accused persons and they should
be asked to surrender before the trial court.
78. The final word: The true test
to ascertain whether discretion has been judiciously exercised or not is to see
whether the court has been able to strike a balance between the personal
liberty of the accused and the interest of the State, in other words, the
societal interests. Each bail application should be decided in the facts and
circumstances of the case having regard to the various factors germane to the
well settled principles of grant or refusal of bail. In the words of Philip
Stanhope, " Judgment is not upon all occasions required, but discretion
always is".
79. In the result all these
appeals succeed and are allowed. The impugned orders of bail passed by the High
Court are hereby set aside.
80. All the accused persons are
directed to surrender before the committal court and the committal court in
turn shall remand them to judicial custody.
81. We issue the following
further directions: -
a. We
direct the Chief Judicial Magistrate District Varanasi and the Additional Chief
Judicial Magistrate Court No. 5 District Varanasi to commit all the three
criminal cases referred to in para 9 of this judgment to the sessions court,
within a period of two weeks from today without fail.
b. Upon
all the three criminal cases being committed to the court of sessions, the
concerned trial court shall proceed to frame charge against individual accused
persons within a period of one week thereafter.
c. If
it is brought to the notice of the trial court that some of the accused persons
have absconded or their whereabouts are not known, the trial court shall take
steps immediately to secure their presence by issuing non-bailable warrant etc.
The trial of the absconding accused shall be separated in accordance with law
so that the trial of the other co-accused persons do not get delayed.
d. Once
the charge is framed by the trial court in individual cases, the concerned
trial court shall proceed with the recording of the evidence preferably on
day-to-day basis and complete the proceedings of the trial within a period of
six months.
e. We
direct the State Government to appoint three special public prosecutors for the
purpose of conducting of the trials well versed in criminal trials at the
earliest.
f. We
also direct the State Government to provide police protection to the victims
and their families pending the trial at the earliest so as to prevent tampering
of the evidence.
g. We
grant two months' time to the State Police to trace out all those accused
persons who have absconded and are on the run. They shall be apprehended and
produced before the court concerned at the earliest.
h. We
direct the State Government to ensure that the trafficked children are admitted
in schools in accordance with the provisions of the Right of Children to Free
and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 and continue to provide support for their
education.
i. At
the end of the trial, the concerned trial court shall pass appropriate orders
as regards compensation to the victims under the provisions of the BNSS 2023
including under the Uttar Pradesh Rani Laxmi Bai Mahila Evam Bal Samman Kosh
managed by the Land Welfare Committee.
j. All
the State Governments across the country are directed to look into the report
of BIRD dated 12.04.2023 more particularly the recommendations, as reproduced
by us in para 34 of this judgment.
k. All
the State Governments are directed to study the entire report and start
implementing each of the recommendations by working out appropriate modalities
in that regard.
l. We
direct all the High Courts across the country to call for the necessary
information as regards the status of the pending trials relating to child
trafficking. Once each of the High Courts is able to collect the necessary data
as regards the status of the trials, a circular thereafter shall be issued on
its administrative side to all the concerned trial courts to complete the
trials within a period of six months from the date of the circular and if need
be, by conducting the trials on day-to-day basis. Each of the High Courts shall
thereafter forward a report to this Court as regards the compliance of the
directions contained in the circular, m. Non-compliance of our directions or
any laxity of any nature in that regard on the part of any of the authorities
shall be viewed very strictly and if need be, they shall be proceeded for
contempt.
82. With the aforesaid, all the
appeals stand disposed of.
83. In the course of the hearing
of this batch of appeals, we also came across the Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 43
of 2024 in which a coordinate bench of this Court has passed the following
order:
"1.
Heard Ms. Aparna Bhat, learned senior counsel appearing for the petitioner. The
Union of India is represented by Ms. Aishwarya Bhati, learned ASG. Mr. Garvesh
Kabra, learned counsel appears for respondent No. 2 - State of Uttar Pradesh.
Mr. Sarad Kumar Singhania, learned counsel appears for respondent No. 4 - State
of Madhya Pradesh. Mr. Milind Kumar, learned counsel appears for respondent No.
5 - State ofRajasthan.
2. This
Writ Petition is concerned with the plight of children who are victims of
organised child trafficking racket spread across multiple States in the
country. Young children from vulnerable families are kidnapped and sold to
traffickers who work on a network basis.
3. Ms.
Aparna Bhat, learned senior counsel submits that multiple FIRs have been filed
in different States which would indicate a well entrenched inter-state network
of child trafficking. There are people who are tasked to identify vulnerable
children and to arrange for their trafficking and eventual exploitation. The
picture given in the Writ Petition raises serious issues.
4. The
Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India had filed an affidavit on
23.09.2024. The same is taken on record.
The
affidavit indicates the advisories issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs to
all the States and the Union Territories on 25.06.2013 to address the 3
specific aspects of trafficking i.e., prevention, protection and prosecution.
Special financial assistance is also provided by the Union Government to the
States/Union Territories, for upgrading/setting up of the Anti-Human
Trafficking Units covering all the districts in the country. Coordination with
all the stakeholders on regular basis is also mentioned in the counter affidavit.
In fact, a national level communication platform called the Crime Multi Agency
Centre (Cri-MAC) was launched in the year 2020 which facilitates dissemination
of information, inter alia, about child trafficking crimes, on real time basis.
5. At this
point, the results of the coordinated efforts made by the Union Home Ministry
with the States and the Union Territories are not before us. The Union of India
should therefore coordinate with all the stakeholders, collect and collate data
on the issues noted hereunder and also file the report before this Court:
(i) How
many children missing cases have been registered in each District/State since
2020 i.e. when the Cri-MAC was launched?
(ii)
From the registered cases, how many children have been recovered within the
stipulated period of 4 months and how many are yet to be recovered?
(iii)
Whether a functional Anti-Human Trafficking Units in each district is
established and if so (number of cases entrusted to the respective Anti-Human
Trafficking Units).
(iv)
The powers conferred on the Anti-Human Trafficking Units under applicable laws.
(v) The
number of pending prosecutions relating to child trafficking cases in each
District/State.
(vi)
Year-wise data be provided including the steps the respective States intend to
take in delayed cases of investigation or non-recovery of the missing child.
6. The learned ASG will file a
report as above in six weeks. List after six weeks. "
84. It goes without saying that
it is an important Writ Petition filed under Article 32 of the Constitution. It
raises important issues as is evident from the order passed by this Court
referred to above.
85. The Registry shall notify
Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 43 of 2024 before the appropriate court after
obtaining orders from the Hon'ble Chief Justice of India.
86. It is needless to clarify
that the observations made by this Court are prima facie in nature and not
expressions of any final opinion. The guilt or innocence of the accused shall
be determined by the trial court strictly on the basis of the evidence, direct
or indirect, that may come on record during the course of the trial. The trial
court shall not be influenced in any manner by any of the observations made by
this Court.
87. Registry is directed to
forward one copy each of this judgment to all the High Courts and one copy each
to all the State Governments. So far as the State Governments are concerned,
one copy each of this judgment shall be forwarded to the Principal Secretary,
Ministry of Home Affairs and Principal Secretary, Ministry of Women and Child
Development respectively.
88. Registry shall notify this
matter once again in the month of October, 2025 to report compliance of our
directions.
89. We request the Police Officer
in-charge of the investigation of the above incident of child trafficking as
reported by TOI to personally remain present before this Court on Monday
21.04.2025 so that we can gather some further information as regards the action
plan the Police proposes to take against such gangs operating within and
outside Delhi. Registry to inform the officer concerned accordingly at the
earliest.
90. We want to convey a message
to one & all more particularly the parents across the country that they
should remain extremely vigilant and careful with their children. A slight
carelessness or negligence or laxity on their part may prove to be extremely
costly. The pain and agony which any parents may have to face when the child
dies is different from the pain and agony that the parents may have to face
when they lose their children to such gangs engaged in trafficking. When the
child dies, the parents may with passage of time resign to the will of the
Almighty but when the child is lost and not found they have to suffer the pain
and agony for the rest of their life. It is worst than death. Therefore, we
humbly urge to one and all to remain very cautious and vigilant.
91. If any newborn infant is
trafficked from any hospital, the immediate action against the hospital should
be suspension of licence to run the hospital over and above other actions in
accordance with law. When any lady comes to deliver her baby in any hospital,
it is the responsibility of the administration of the hospital to protect the
newborn infant in all respects.
92. Pending applications if any
stand disposed of.
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