Posts Tagged ‘Kidnap’
Excerpt from DNA by Divyesh Singh on , January 11, 2010: Read Full Article
Chembur police have arrested five persons in connection with the abduction and wrongful confinement of a 30-year-old man.
Manoj Jaiswal, a professional driver, was allegedly kidnapped by the accused and confined in a ration shop in Mankhud for two days.
According to Chembur police, the accused had hired Jaiswal last month to go to Baroda for a jewellery deal. They had allegedly smuggled in the gold and silver jewellery. However, at Baroda, the five were robbed of their valuables by some unidentified people.
But they suspected that the robbery was planned by Jaiswal.
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“Hopes are raised and, after some time, they are dashed,” exclaimed a division bench of Justice Bilal Nazki and Justice A R Joshi. This is the second time that the couple was let down after the DNA tests conducted on another baby found on a Bandra suburban train earlier had also returned a negative result.
The court has now directed director-general of police S S Virk to personally supervise the investigations to trace the missing baby. “We have legitimate expectations from the DGP,” the judges remarked, expressing hope that the child would be found.
Mohan and Mohini Nerurkar’s three-day-old son was kidnapped by an unidentified woman on 1 January 2009 from the maternity ward of Sion Hospital. The couple had filed a habeas corpus petition claiming that cops were not serious about finding their child. The high court had ordered the BMC to pay Rs 5 lakh as interim compensation to the couple.
Cops have been filing regular updates on the orders of the court but investigations have yielded no result so far. The police initially informed the court that they were investigating a woman who they suspected to be the kidnapper. Subsequently, the police had shifted the focus to tracing the baby. As the Nerurkars had seen their child when he was a new born baby, the police found that they were unable to positively identify the eight or nine month old abandoned kids who were shown to the couple. The latest DNA test on an abandoned baby who was kept at a shelter in Vile Parle, came back with the report that the Nerurkars’ were not the biological parents. The court has asked the DGP to make further efforts to find the baby and file a report in 10 days.
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As reported in TOI by Vijay Singh , on 27 August 2009
Two doctors, representing an insurance firm, were kidnapped from a Sanpada nursing home where they had gone to verify a medical claim put forth by the hospital management.
On receiving a complaint by ICICI Lombard, the Turbhe police swung into action and rescued Dr Vinod Singh and Dr Ramesh Singh from a Govandi hospital on Tuesday evening. Three persons, including a doctor at Sharda Nursing Home in Sanpada, have been arrested.
Inspector (crime) M M Patil said another employee of ICICI Lombard received a threat call from one of the accused, claiming that they were “dangerous people” and they would “harm the doctors if their medical insurance bill was not cleared immediately”. The nursing home had submitted bills of one of their patients, Suresh Dube, to ICICI Lombard at their Malad office. However, as the company found loopholes in the documents submitted by the nursing home, they sent the doctors to the hospital for verification.
“Dr Santosh Tiwari, in charge of the hospital, kidnapped the two doctors with the help of his associates, Satyendra Tiwari and Sanjay Soni,” Patil said.
When the police raided the nursing home at Sanpada, they learnt that the kidnapped doctors had been taken to another hospital in Govandi (E). A police team was then sent there and the doctors rescued. “We are investigating if Tiwari has a genuine MBBS degree and the if there is a racket concerning medical insurance claims,” Patil said. Turbhe police officials are on the lookout for two more accused in the case
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On Wednesday, the division bench of Justice Ranjana Desai and Justice Rajesh Ketkar said there needs to be a strategy to deal with the ever increasing number of cases of missing children. The Bombay high court is planning to conduct a special hearing in this matter. The judges directed the court staff to club all cases that relate to missing children and place them for hearing on May 4.
Chembur couple Mohan and Mohini Nerurkar whose new-born son was kidnapped from the maternity ward of Sion hospital in January this year had filed a petition a before the court. While the BMC has deposited Rs 5 lakh towards compensation for the couple, the court has also formed a committee to frame guidelines for increased security at the hospitals.
As reported in TOI 30th April by Shibu Thomas … HC plans hearing for missing kids
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Mohan and Mohini Nerurkar had their three-day-old baby boy allegedly stolen from Sion Hospital a a few days back. The Chembur couple has taken an emotional beating ever since, but is still hopeful that they will be able to hold their baby in their arms again.
The couple, who has seen one baby found by the Chembur police in February last week, claimed that it was not theirs. But it has been over two months since they saw their child last and identifying it may not be easy.
“I will surely be able to identify my son. He would open his eyes at the sound of my voice. He could recognise my voice,” Mohan Nerurkar said. “We had not even decided on his name and were referring to him with different nicknames. We did not even take a picture of him,” said an aggrieved Nerurkar.
Mohini, who breaks into tears when asked about her child, says that she can never forget the face of her son. “I saw the baby that the Chembur police had found but it was not my son, he was much fairer than that child,” she said.
Mohan’s brother-in-law AD Salunke, who accompanies him to every court hearing said, “The child must be looking much different since the time it was born. It is going to be difficult for the parents to recognise him at a glance.”
Although the police will conduct DNA tests and verify the blood samples of the child and the parents, the question remains that would the couple identify the child if they spotted it with someone on the road?
“He had tiny strands of hair on his neck and his back. Both my daughters had those when they were born. That’s how we will be able to identify him,” Mohan said. Salunke said that the child resembled his mother more than his father.
“Such small children get attached to people out of habit. Since the baby has been away from the parents for so long, he may not even respond to their call or their touch now,” added Salunke.
As Reported in DNA on 9th March 2009
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The Bombay Municipal Corporation (BMC) has invited wrath of various social groups for its behavior in the Sion hospital baby kidnap case. Initially BMC said that it would pay 5 lakh compensation to Chembur residents Mohan and Mohini Nerurkar, whose three-day-old baby was kidnapped from the Sion Hospital on January 1. But on Friday, it told the court that it would pay no compensation to the couple at this stage.
Mihir Desai of India Centre for Human Rights and Law said: “The incident shows that the BMC is completely brazen. There is no ambiguity about the fact that the child went missing and that the incident occurred within the hospital premises.”
The BMC also said that it had no intention to suspend the two security officers, who had been held responsible for the incident, till the departmental inquiry was complete.
Health activist Arokya Mary informed that the case highlighted the need for accountability in public hospitals. It’s not the first time babies have gone missing. The administrators keep giving excuses, but there is no mechanism to get to the root cause.
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