"If the missing child is of an aristocratic person or when it comes to people with money, thousands of policemen are there and you trace the child in three days. But if the child of a poor man goes missing, police don't even register FIR," a bench headed by Justice H L Dattu observed and referred to a report about the tracing in three days a child who had gone missing from high-profile Medanta Hospital in Gurgaon.
Further, it noted that some states have not bothered to comply with its guidelines to have each police station with at least one cop trained and designated as a Juvenile Welfare Officer to investigate crimes against children and there was also failure to appoint para-legal volunteer in shifts, in the police station to keep a watch over the manner in which the complaints regarding missing children and other offences against children, are dealt with.
It was not happy with the affidavits filed by Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh and Gujarat.
Senior advocate H S Phoolka, appearing for an NGO, said since many states have not provided data, information on missing children have been secured from the records of Rajya Sabha questions and from the National Crime Records Bureau.