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Haryana

Haryana moves to end child begging racket, State launches SMILE-backed Rescue and Rehabilitation Drive

August 14, 2025 03:36 PM
Haryana moves to end child begging racket, State launches SMILE-backed Rescue and Rehabilitation Drive

Punjab Newsline, Chandigarh-

In a decisive move to dismantle organised begging rackets and protect vulnerable children from exploitation, the Haryana State Commission for Protection of Child Rights (HSCPCR) has rolled out a state-backed rescue and rehabilitation initiative under the Union Government’s SMILE scheme (Support for Marginalised Individuals for Livelihood and Enterprise).

A State-level Inter-Departmental Meeting, chaired by Additional Chief Secretary, Women and Child Development Department (WCD), Haryana, Sudhir Rajpal, brought together top police, child protection, health, labour, and social welfare officers to target the root causes of child begging and create a clear roadmap for its eradication.

He said that child begging is not an isolated act of poverty in many cases, it is a criminally organised industry where children are forced into the streets by cartels, traffickers, or even relatives for monetary gain. It strips children of education, exposes them to abuse, and traps them in lifelong cycles of vulnerability.

The Panchkula Pilot — Three Phases to Break the Cycle:

The first phase is mapping the Problem; Joint mapping of begging hotspots — traffic lights, religious places, and markets — by District Administration, WCD, and NGOs, Headcount of child beggars and identification of orphans, abandoned children, or those without family support. Second phase is Swift Rescue and Protection; District Task Force to rescue children in immediate need of shelter, Cases to be presented before the Child Welfare Committee (CWC) for legal protection, and Social Investigation Reports prepared under the Juvenile Justice Act, 2015, leading to personalised rehabilitation plans and, in third phase Long-Term Rehabilitation and Tracking; it will focus on preventing re-victimisation and trafficking, Regular monitoring of rehabilitated children and education, skills training, and family reintegration wherever possible. The meeting recognised that begging in many urban centres operates under well-structured rackets, exploiting children as income sources. The pilot aims not just to remove children from the streets but to dismantle these criminal networks through police action, intelligence sharing, and coordinated follow-up.

Sudhir Rajpal said that child begging is an exploitation of innocence and a violation of basic human rights. Haryana is committed to breaking this vicious cycle through rescue, rehabilitation, and strict action against those who profit from it. He further said that a follow-up meeting will be held in 15 days to assess progress, review the first rescue operations, and finalise strategies for scaling the model across the state.

DCP Crime and Traffic, Panchkula, Manpreet Singh, Additional Deputy Commissioner, Panchkula,  Nisha and other officers remained present during the meeting.

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