INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Kathmandu, December 31
The government has formed a five-member investigation commission led by former high court chief judge Hari Babu
Bhattarai to probe the activities of Bal Mandir (Nepal Children Organisation) and children homes.
A notice published by the Ministry of
Women, Children and Senior Citizens in the Nepal Gazette yesterday said the panel was formed in accordance with Section 3 (2) of the
Commissions of Inquiry Act-1969.
&If the Government of Nepal is of the opinion that it is necessary to appoint a commission for the purpose
of making an inquiry into any matter of public importance, it may appoint such a commission,& reads the act.
Members of the commission
include two child rights experts and two joint secretaries from the Ministry of Home Affairs and MoWCSC
The notice stated that the commission was given three months time to complete the investigation and submit report, along with
recommendations to reform Bal Mandir and action against its officials, if any, found to have involved in embezzlement of the state fund and
other unauthorised activities.
The MoWCSC has determined the scope of the commission to ensure that it doesn&t deviate from its track
&The commission shall study the organisational propriety of Bal Mandir and children home, their policy provisions, structural arrangements
and need for necessary reforms,& read the notice.
It also requires the commission to investigate into various decisions taken by the
Kathmandu-based central office of Bal Mandir and its district offices in the past, to ascertain whether they were consistent with the
prevailing laws and policy provisions or not.
&If the officials of Bal Mandir and district-based children homes are found to have made any
decision contrary to the laws in force, the commission shall recommend the MoWCSC to initiate legal or departmental action against them,&
read the notice.
In addition, the commission has been told to conduct inquiry into the use and management of land, buildings and other
physical assets of Bal Mandir and children homes
The commission will also investigate into the activities carried out by Bal Mandir and children homes in the past to evaluate how effective
they were for the protection and management of needy children entitled to the government facilities.
Office of the commission is situated in
the MoWCSC, which will be provided with necessary budget through the Ministry of Finance
Director of Bal Mandir Balkrishna Dangol was arrested on August 14 for his alleged involvement in child trafficking
He had assisted a British woman Dina Smith in ‘buying& a Nepali baby girl at Rs 450,000 and for obtaining fake documents to claim the baby
Kathmandu District Court had remanded him to judicial custody
This was revealed after Smith was held by immigration office at Tribhuvan International Airport while trying to leave Nepal with the infant
in the first week of August.
Naxal-based Bal Mandir was established in 1964 for the protection of orphans, helpless, abandoned and unclaimed
children.
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