Friday, June 7, 2024
ADVT 
India

Indian-Origin Boys To Get Payout Over Toy Gun Episode In UK

The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2017 01:13 PM
    A family of mixed Indian and Middle Eastern heritage has won compensation after two brothers, aged seven and five, were questioned by police over the toy guns they were playing with at a school in the East of England.
     
    The boys were reported to Bedfordshire Police as being at risk of radicalisation in March last year but officers quickly concluded there was no issue of concern.
     
    The school and the boys cannot be named to protect their identity as minors.
     
    "I was told they had displayed signs that were worrying in terms of being reasonable indicators of being involved in terrorist activity. They had no other reason to believe they had any signs of extremism other than the colour of their skin," the mother, of Indian Hindu heritage, told BBC.
     
    "I understand that [terrorism] is a problem, but this is a rather blunt instrument with which to tackle it. There are some residual effects - both boys have suffering nightmares.
     
    My younger boy fears he might taken away. We are trying to help them move on," she said.
     
    She claims being told that one of the boys had been speaking Arabic and talked about attending a mosque even though none of the family spoke Arabic and the children did not go to mosques.
     
    Central Bedfordshire Council has since accepted the children were racially discriminated against and issued an apology as well as agreed to pay an undisclosed sum in compensation.
     
    "We accept the boys were discriminated against and have apologised to the family," a council statement said.
     
    The school's governors have reportedly found that teachers were unsure if they had a duty to report their concerns under Prevent, the UK government's anti-radicalisation strategy, which had led to this incident.
     
    "We were called to reports of concern for safety and two officers attended - this was not in a 'Prevent' capacity but routine police attendance and the officers were only present for a short time," Bedfordshire Police said in its statement.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    15-Year-Old Boy Commits Suicide In Delhi

    A 15-year-old boy hanged himself from a ceiling fan in Dwarka area of south west Delhi, after his father rebuked him for getting into a fight with some local boys, police said on Friday.

    15-Year-Old Boy Commits Suicide In Delhi

    Drugs, Despair, Decline Fuel Demand For Change In Punjab

    Drugs, Despair, Decline Fuel Demand For Change In Punjab
    Kuch na hona Punjab da, zameen banjar, aulad kanjar. (Nothing can come of Punjab -- lands barren, children jobless.)

    Drugs, Despair, Decline Fuel Demand For Change In Punjab

    Punjab Polls: Candidates At Doorsteps To Woo Voters Amid Tight Security

    Punjab Polls: Candidates At Doorsteps To Woo Voters Amid Tight Security
    With only a couple of hours left for the February 4 Punjab assembly elections to get unerway, leaders and workers of various political parties on Friday moved from door to door in a last-ditch effort to woo voters amid tight security in the border state.

    Punjab Polls: Candidates At Doorsteps To Woo Voters Amid Tight Security

    Over 100,000 Security Personnel Deployed For Punjab Polls

    Over 100,000 Security Personnel Deployed For Punjab Polls
    Over one lakh security personnel, including central paramilitary forces, will be on high alert as Punjab voters on Saturday exercise their franchise in 117 assembly segments as well as the by-election for the Amritsar Lok Sabha seat.

    Over 100,000 Security Personnel Deployed For Punjab Polls

    Punjab Elections 2017: AAP To Deploy 15,000 Volunteers With Spy Cameras

    Punjab Elections 2017: AAP To Deploy 15,000 Volunteers With Spy Cameras
    Aap Aadmi Party (AAP), which is eyeing to wrest power in Punjab, will deploy 15,000 volunteers equipped with spy cameras outside the polling stations in the state tomorrow to keep a "close watch on distribution of liquor or cash to lure voters".

    Punjab Elections 2017: AAP To Deploy 15,000 Volunteers With Spy Cameras

    Former CBI Director Joginder Singh Passes Away After Prolonged Illness

    Former CBI Director Joginder Singh Passes Away After Prolonged Illness
    An IPS officer, Singh was the CBI director between 1996-97.

    Former CBI Director Joginder Singh Passes Away After Prolonged Illness