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LS passes Bill to strengthen norms relating to protection and adoption of children
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SME Times News Bureau | 24 Mar, 2021
The Lok Sabha on Wednesday unanimously passed a bill to strengthen the
provisions of Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act,
2015 to ensure better protection and adoption of children.
Union
Minister of Women and Child Development Smriti Zubin Irani, while
addressing the House, said that the amended bill would address various
issues flagged by a panel that had looked into the working of the
Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015.
The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Amendment Bill,
2021 amends the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act,
2015 which contains provisions related to children in conflict with law
and children in need of care and protection.
The Bill seeks to
introduce measures for strengthening the child protection setup. It adds
that serious offences will be included as offences for which maximum
punishment is imprisonment of more than seven years, and minimum
punishment is not prescribed or is of less than seven years.
Offences which are punishable with imprisonment between three to seven
years will now be non-cognizable (where arrest will not be allowed
without warrant).
The Bill provides that any person aggrieved by
an adoption order passed by the District Magistrate may file an appeal
before the Divisional Commissioner, within 30 days from the date of
passage of such order. Such appeals should be disposed of within four
weeks from the date of filing of the appeal.
The Minister said
that the purpose of the Bill is to provide protection to children
residing in childcare units as well as those rescued from somewhere.
The government planned for the amendment in the Bill after an audit of
more than 7,000 childcare institutes being run in India to find
loopholes in their functioning, the Minister said, adding almost 90 per
cent of them are run by NGOs.
In an audit, the Minister said it was found that 29 per cent of the institutions were not registered.
"There
are many states where 26 per cent institutes have no women employees,
15 per cent don't have separate beds for the child, among other
discrepancies.
"One fourth said that child welfare committees
had not visited ever in these institutions," the Minister said, adding
"the amendment I am pushing aimed that we should not wait for child to
become a victim".
The Minister stressed on the need for supervision of every institution through the Bill.
In
the adoption amendment, the Minister said, we are giving full powers to
District Magistrates, saying "we (the Central government) are
prioritising our children in the past 70 years history of the country."
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| Customs Exchange Rates |
| Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
₹84.00
|
₹82.25 |
UK Pound
|
₹104.65
|
₹108.10 |
Euro
|
₹92.50
|
₹89.35 |
| Japanese
Yen |
₹56.10 |
₹54.40 |
| As on 25 Jul, 2025 |
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