No trace of missing Bihar shelter home girl\, key witness in Muzaffarpur horror case

No trace of missing Bihar shelter home girl, key witness in Muzaffarpur horror case

IANS  |  Patna 

The police are yet to trace the whereabouts of one of the seven girls who had escaped from a short-stay home in in district three days ago. The six other inmates were recovered by the police within 24 hours of their escape.

With police still in dark on her whereabouts, of Police (DGP) Gupteshwar Pandey on Tuesday expressed hope that the police would recover her soon.

According to police headquarters sources here, seven specially formed teams are looking for the girl in and for the last two days. "A team was sent to her native village but she was not found there," a said.

It may be noted that this missing girl had in her confessional statement reportedly revealed names of several persons, including top government officers and powerful politicians, who would regularly visit the shelter home.

"She had shocked police officers during the probe by revealing that main accused (in shelter home case) often took her and some other girls out of the shelter home to unknown places where his guests sexually exploited them," said the

Seven girls, including five, who were allegedly abused at the infamous home last year, escaped from the short-stay home on Friday night. The police, however, say that most likely, these girls had not escaped but were made to flee the shelter home.

The girls were shifted to after the home case surfaced in May 2018 following an audit by the (TISS), which revealed that most of the 41 girls lodged in the shelter home had been sexually abused.

The incident comes as an embarrassment for the government, especially after a POCSO (Protection of Children from Sexual Offences) court on February 16 directed the (CBI) to conduct an inquiry into the involvement of the and two senior officials in the case.

Opposition and CPI-ML have demanded the resignation of alleging that the missing girl was made to flee from shelter home to save some powerful people involved in the home case.

The Muzaffarpur horror came to light in May 2018 when the Social Welfare Department filed an FIR based on the TISS social audit.

Brajesh Thakur, a journalist-turned-social activist, who was heading the NGO that ran the shelter home, and other accused were arrested. The matter was handed over to the CBI in July last year.

Thakur has been shifted to a high-security jail in Patiala following a order, while other accused, including his close aides and some government officials, are lodged in jails at and Muzaffarpur.

The trial of the case has been shifted to

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, February 26 2019. 16:56 IST