No Way To Home
No Way To Home
This is the story of Childers those who go out from home but never came back.
The corpses of children who had gone missing in the preceding two years were discovered in December 2006, according to two Nithari village locals, in the municipal water tank behind house D5 in Sector-31, Noida. Both women had daughters who had vanished, and they believed Surinder Koli, the housekeeper at D5, was responsible. The residents complained that local officials had disregarded them on numerous occasions and turned to S C Mishra, the previous president of the Resident Welfare Association (RWA), for assistance. Mishra and the two residents looked in the tank drain that morning. After one of the residents reported discovering a dead hand, the police were called.
Parents of children who have been missing for the past two years hastened to Nithari with photos. After sexually assaulting six children and a 20-year-old woman known only as "Payal," Koli, using the alias Satish, later admitted to killing them all.
The missing children's families charged the police of negligence. At first, certain police officers, notably Noida SP City, disputed that there was any criminal element and said that the families had given incorrect information about the ages of the missing; that they were not kids but rather adults who fled home after arguing with their parents. The police, according to the inhabitants, were crooked and were paid to withhold information. A request for an impartial investigation was made. One of the locals complained that the police were taking credit for finding the bodies when the locals had actually dug them up. The police reiterated that they had found skulls, bones, and other body parts but denied finding fifteen bodies, saying they were unable to provide any further information.
The police denied discovering fifteen bodies, stating that they had found skulls, bones, and other body parts instead, and that they were unable to estimate how many people had been killed. Only DNA tests allowed for the identification of the victims and their number. The residence was subsequently shut off by the police, who also barred press crews from the area.
The central government investigated the circumstances surrounding the finding of the skeletal remains to see if there were any "inter-state consequences." While maintaining law and order is a state responsibility, the Home Ministry requested information regarding the severity of the offence. The police detained both Koli and Moninder Singh Pandher on December 26 and 27, respectively, in relation to the disappearance of "Payal." Following Koli's admission, the police began excavating a neighboring plot of property and found the bodies of the kids.
Two policemen were suspended on 31 December for coming up short to require activity in spite of being educated almost a number of children lost, as irate inhabitants charged the house of the charged plan, requesting the evacuation of the Mulayam Singh government. The circumstance at Nithari was irritated as an irate horde of villagers battled with police, the pelting stones at each other, fair exterior the home of the denounced. The police too kept Pandher's housekeeper Maya beneath doubt that she baited ladies to the house. As more body parts were burrowed up close the premises, hundreds of nearby inhabitants plummeted on the spot and affirmed that there was an organ exchange association to the shocking killings of youthful children. A doctor living near to the Pandher home, Navin Choudhary, had been beneath police doubt a couple of a long time earlier in association with a charged kidney racket at his clinic. Looks were conducted all through his properties, and the agents found no prove to bolster the claim.
On 12 February 2009, both the accused—Moninder Singh Pandher and his household hireling Surinder Koli—were found blameworthy of the 8 February 2005 kill of Rimpa Haldar, 14, by an extraordinary sessions court in Ghaziabad.
This decision cleared out the Central Bureau of Examination (CBI) ruddy confronted, as the CBI had prior given a clean chit to Moninder Singh Pandher in all its chargesheets. Both the blamed Moninder Singh Pandher and Surinder Koli were given the passing sentence on 13 February 2009, as the case was classified as "rarest of rarest".
