LCI Learning
Master the Art of Contract Drafting & Corporate Legal Work with Adv Navodit Mehra. Register Now!

Share on Facebook

Share on Twitter

Share on LinkedIn

Share on Email

Share More

Guest (Guest)     26 August 2009

Actress Suchitra Krishnamoorthi booked for employing child l

  In the wake of growing abuse of domestic servants and minors in the city, the Maharashtra government on Tuesday filed cases against

Suchitra Krishnamoorthi. (TOI Photo)
Bollywood actress Suchitra Krishnamoorthi and television star Laxmi for allegedly employing child labour. 



Labour Minister Nawab Malik told media persons on Tuesday afternoon that his department got information that the two actresses were employing minor girls as maids. 



"Accordingly, we have initiated necessary proceedings against the two actresses. We appeal to people to come forward and give us information about such individuals who employ child labour so we can take suitable steps in the matter," Malik said. 



Suchitra is the former wife of noted director Shekhar Kapur. 



The action comes barely three days after television actress Urvashi Dhanorkar was arrested Saturday for beating, burning and confining her 10-year old maid after she caught her "eating".



Dhanorkar was bailed out hours after her arrest. Meanwhile, the victim, Rameshwari is now in a juvenile rescue home. 



The Child Labour Prevention Act, 1986, was amended October 2006 to ban employment of children under 14 as domestic servants and in dhabas, restaurants, hotels and other hospitality sectors. It makes their employment a punishable offence.



 2 Replies

Guest (Guest)     26 August 2009

  

I don’t have a maid below 14: Suchitra



Suchitra Krishnamoorthi is shocked at being accused of employing a minor as a maid. She says, “I was having lunch with a girlfriend when I got 
Suchitra Krishnamoorthi
a few calls from journos and friends telling me I am on TV-breaking news. 




Suchitra Krishnamoorthi accused of employing a girl below 14-abusing child labour laws!’ To say I am shocked and hurt is putting it mildly - I am devastated.” 



The actress, painter and mother of a nine-year-old adds, “The Labour Minister has named me on TV - the television is full of images of me alongside of a nine-year-old bruised and abused little girl that was rescued a few days ago from the home of a television actress Urvashi. There is nothing more painful than that visual to me, the mother of a nine-year-old myself.” 



Suchitra, the former wife of filmmaker Shekhar Kapur, writes on her blog, “Whatever the labour department has said about today me - It is a LIE. I have employed no one below the age of 14 and certainly no one by the name of Nayantri, not currently and NEVER in the past.” 



She adds, “I currently employ two girls aged 18. I have registered with two maid agencies in the city who provide me maids with verification and identity.” 



Denying that the labour department, police or NGO had been contact with her over the issue, she says sternly, “I demand and challenge them to come up with the proof of the heinous accusations they are hurling at me. My home and my phone line are open to them. As a law abiding citizen I have every right to ask them to furnish me with the evidence they have supposedly gathered against me. Who is this girl? What are they talking about?” 



Suchitra states, “So whoever else the labour department is talking about is a figment of their imagination. I am a law abiding citizen and have spent the last few years working towards the betterment of women and children’s lives. Not only with my money but with my valuable time energy and love.” 



She says, “When I first saw the news break out I thought it may be about a maid called Rajmoti I had employed over a month ago. She was 16 or 17 and sent to me by her sister Sunita who has been working in my dear friend Tanaya’s home for four years. They told me Rajmoti needed a home. She was fresh from her village that didn’t even have electricity and were keen for her to love and stay in the city for a while.” 



“So wondering if the labour laws had changed from 14 to 18, and if this was what the ruckus was about, I called up her sister Sunita and asked if they had perhaps been contacted by an NGO or lodged a complaint. They were shocked and assured me that I had done them a favour by taking the girl in and there was no way they would have lodged a complaint and nor had any NGO or labour department contacted them. So it’s definitely not Rajmoti. As for this other girl Nayantari, that the labour department is accusing me of employing and abusing, I am not even aware of her existence.” 



She is willing to give the benefit of doubt to the authorities concerned, “I don’t know who is behind this and why my name is being dragged into it. Maybe it’s a misunderstanding and the name has been misunderstood. I am willing to give them the benefit of the doubt and will pause a bit before I decide what further I need to do.” 



Suchitra concludes, “I am not going to let a lie and a fabricated accusation strip me of everything I stand for, have worked towards and believe in. I have faith that the truth with prevail.”

Guest (Guest)     26 August 2009

 

Actor Suchitra Krisnamoorthy denies state's allegations

 The brutal physical abuse received by a 10-year-old maid allegedly in the hands of her employee, small-time television actress Urvashi Dhanorkar, has stirred a hornet's nest, with three more cases of child abuse - all involving film and television actors - coming to light at a Mantralaya review meeting on Tuesday. At the meeting held by the state labour ministry, NGOs revealed that they had rescued children from the houses of actors Suchitra Krishnamoorthy, Laxmi and yesteryear heroine Huma Khan. 



State labour secretary Kavita Gupta told TOI, "These names were given to us by the NGOs who were present for the meeting in the Urvashi Dhanorkar case. Krihnamoorthy has denied these allegations on the grounds that they are baseless. 



Gupta added: "The three children who were rescued, all of them under 14, were Naranthi, a Meghalaya girl working at Suchitra Krishnamoorthy's house, Laila Khan from televions actor Laxmi's house in Malad, and Shanti Vishwakarma who worked at Huma Khan's house in Mira Road.'' Gupta clarified that all the rescues had been undertaken by independent NGOs. 



What's surprising, though, is the labour ministry was unable to give TOI the names of the NGOs who were responsible for bring these cases to light, nor was it able to clarify the identity of the actress Laxmi. "I will give you the details of all these cases on Wednesday morning,'' said Nawab Malik, state labour minister. 



When contacted, Krishnamoorthy said: "The only child in my house is my own. I would really want the minister to substantiate these allegations with evidence. I am the last person to be dragged into a child labour case.'' 



In 2008, Huma Khan, the third person named by the NGOs, was arrested by the police for allegedly kidnapping and torturing her maid's 12-year-old daughter for eight months. The case is currently awaiting trial. 



Defending his move that the state is especially targeting actors and celebrities, Malik said, "There are about 3,000 cases with us, and there are a number of other celebrities also on our list. It clearly means that a number of them do employ minors in their homes.'' 



He added that the NGO had also mentioned a non-celebrity couple who had been arrested for assaulting their maid, who was a minor. 



Malik said, "I will be getting all the details from the police and the NGOs by Wednesday morning.''


Leave a reply

Your are not logged in . Please login to post replies

Click here to Login / Register