Juvenile Delinquency in Bangladesh
Juvenile Delinquency in Bangladesh
Juvenile Delinquency in Bangladesh
1
Chapter 1
1. INTRODUCTION
Juvenile delinquency refers to children who act against the law. Most legal systems
prescribe specific procedures for dealing with juveniles, such as juvenile detention
centers. There are a multitude of different theories on the causes of crime, most if not
all of which can be applied to the causes of youth crime. Youth crime is a major issue
and is an aspect of crime which receives great attention from the news media and
politicians. Crime committed by young people has risen since the mid-twentieth
century, as have most types of crime. The level and types of youth crime can be used
by commentators as an indicator of the general state of morality and law and order in
a country, and consequently youth crime can be the source of moral panics. Theories
on the causes of youth crime can be viewed as particularly important within
criminology. This is firstly because crime is committed disproportionately by those
aged between fifteen and twenty-five. Secondly, by definition any theories on the
causes of crime will focus on youth crime, as adult criminals will have likely started
offending when they were young. Usually, a delinquent will do to someone else what
has been done to them. A Juvenile Delinquent is one who repeatedly commits crime.
These juvenile delinquents sometimes have mental disorders/behavioral issues such as
post traumatic stress disorder or bipolar disorder, and are sometimes diagnosed with
conduct disorder partially as a result of their delinquent behaviors. 1
Juvenile delinquent, a person who is under age (usually below 18), who is
found to have committed a crime in states which have declared by law that a minor
lacks responsibility and thus may not be sentenced as an adult. However, the
legislatures of several states have reduced the age of criminal responsibility for
serious crimes or for repeat offenders to as low as 14. 2
1. Justice V.R Krishnan Eyre- [www.Answers.com], last visited at 17th march, 2010.
2. Nobel Laureate Gabriel Mistral-[www.The free dictionary.com], last visited at 17th march, 2010.
2
A juvenile delinquent is defined as a juvenile who has committed a delinquent
act or is in need of car or supervision. A delinquent act is an act committed by a child
that is designated a violation, misdemeanor, or felony offense under the law of a state
or of another state if the act occurred in another state or under federal law or a
violation of a municipal ordinance except violations of municipal curfew ordinances.
The term usually does not include most traffic offenses committed by one 16 years of
age or older. Juvenile delinquents are subject to state statutes, which vary by state,
allowing for, among other things, taking the juvenile into custody, ordering restitution
for offenses committed, and compliance with supervisory conditions. 3
Juvenile delinquency is the broad-based term given to juveniles who commit
crimes. Juveniles are defined as those people who haven’t reached adulthood or the
age of majority. What defines adulthood or the age of majority in a court system may
be predetermined by law, especially for minor crimes. Major crimes may force the
courts to decide to try a juvenile as an adult, a very important distinction, since
sentencing can then mean not just spending adolescence, but a lifetime in prison.
Delinquency can be defined as the committing of those things considered crimes by
the state, although delinquent can also mean abandoned. Thus juvenile delinquency
can cover anything from small crime — a student who cuts school repeatedly is.4
Juveniles are the most susceptible segment of society. They react sharply to
any other social problem. Scarcity of basic needs, lack of parental attention and any
social crisis touch them so deeply that many of them cannot cope with the abnormal
situation. They respond to social anomalies in ways not approved by social norms and
laws. Some of them even from gang and commit crime, both individually and
collectively. Some of them choose an dangerous life pattern and develop juvenile
subculture to exhibit their resistance that injustice has been done to them. Juvenile
delinquency cannot be considered by keeping it apart from social reality. Social
malfunctioning causes increase of juvenile delinquency and emergence of juvenile
sub-culture, indicating that the children have been subjected to malnourishment. If the
dominant culture of a society fails to accommodate all the children sufficiently, the
deprived young folk will stand up with their own sub-culture.5
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Chapter 2
Nature of Juvenile Delinquency
2.1 Definition
The concept of “Juvenile delinquency” has been vaguely and imprecisely
defined in many countries; a clear definition would be most useful in the formulation
of workable programmers for the prevention of juvenile delinquency. In finding out a
working definition, it should be remarked that juvenile delinquency is not mere
legalistic concept as it is sometimes taken to be. It may be construed as a specific
behavior pattern. It is only when this behavior pattern is of an aggressive nature and
handful to the public that the boy or girl concern come juvenile deliquescence may be
defined in simple words as antisocial tendencies in the young & youthful. It spells the
loss of control of family and society over a portion of the growing generation. An
offender is considered juvenile or criminal on the basis of his age at the time of
conviction not at the time of commission of offence.
“It is a phenomenon which has engaged the attention of society in particular
the law since the birth of civilization. 6”According to Burt, “a child is to be regarded as
technically a delinquent when his anti-social tendencies appear so grave that becomes
subject of official action.
“Irrespective of legal definition, a child might be regarded as delinquent when
his anti-social conduct inflicts suffering upon others or when his family finds him
difficult to control.7
In a broad generic sense, Juvenile delinquency refers to “ a variety of anti-
social be heavier of a child and is defined somewhat differently by different societies,
though a common cornering tendency may be noted in those forms, namely, socially
unacceptable tendency of the child at any given time.”
By Paul W. Tappan, Euphemistic terminology such as “heaving” instead of
trial or instead of “sentence” should not conceal from us the fact that the nature of
entire procedure may be little different from that of a criminal court.
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2.2 Causes of Juvenile Delinquency
Juvenile delinquency has become a global phenomenon these days. Despite intensive
rehabilitative measures and special procedure for tackling the problem of juvenile
delinquency, there is a growing tendency among youngsters to be arrogant, violent
and disobedient to law with the result there has been considerable rise in the incidence
of juvenile delinquency. The main causes for this unprecedented increase in juvenile
delinquency are as follows:
2.2.1 Social Transition: The growing industrialization and urbanization gave rise to
the problem of juvenile delinquency in Bangladesh. Sociologists and
Criminologists consider delinquency as a result of transitional phase, a process
through which majority population is transforming from peasants to industrial
labor class. Mainly Bangladesh is still an agro-based country. Industrialization
has not taken expected pace. In its transition from agriculture to
industrialization, Bangladeshi society is undergoing rapid social change. Since
the transition is not yet complete, since Bangladesh is pre-industrial, it is a
mixed society, not completely traditional and not fully modern. An
examination of the economic, political, and religious institutions reveals a
conflict between traditional and modern values, neither of which dominates
the lives of the people. This conflict has given rise to anomie and creates
greater vulnerability to delinquent behavior. 8
2.2.2 Poverty: The majority populations of Bangladesh are very poor. They live
below poverty line in terms of the true indicators of poverty. Around 65
million out of 130 million people (with 54 million in rural areas)of Bangladesh
live in absolute poverty, and they are amongst the world’s poorest. Bangladesh
is the most densely populated country in the world with 900 people per km.
half of the population of Bangladesh are living in extreme poverty and are
consuming less than equivalent of 1, 805 kilo calories per day. The human
deprivation profile in Bangladesh is very high. 9
8. Mohammad Afsaruddin, Juvenile Delinquency in Bangladesh, (Dhaka: University of Dhaka, 1993), pp. 137.
9. Abul Barkat, “Development-freedom-Empowerment in the context of poverty and Deprivation in Bangladesh.”
5
Because of huge economic disparities large numbers of people in Bangladesh
live below minimum subsistence level. This economic pressure compels many
children to involve in delinquent activities. Many sociological studies show
that the lower one’s economic status, the greater he is vulnerable to arrest and
incarceration. “Living conditions in and around villages and cities were never
very good. Rapid growth of population, a high rate of urbanization outpacing
the development of resources and provision of facilities and services, has
caused further deterioration. The bulk of the population is poor and cannot
own or rent minimum essential shelter or afford minimum amenities. The
result is that we have overcrowding and slums in the cities and depressed
living conditions in the rural areas. Absence of a proper approach to the
problem of balanced growth of our urban and rural areas and a well defined
policy for the location of industries and other economic activities has further
aggravated the problems.” In many cases poverty constitutes the root cause of
juvenile delinquency. Poor parents cannot get their children educated and
developed good educational or vocational career, rather they want their
children to assist them in work field. Sometimes parents cannot provide their
children with all basic necessities. The poor children, therefore, start to do
some activities for their existence. The children do not know which activities
are lawful and which are not. They require some work, which can provide
their food and clothing. By taking advantage of poor economic condition the
criminal gangs deploy poor children in criminal activities. Hundreds of
children are engaged in pick pocketing and petty thievery. Poor children have
been deployed in carrying phencydil, and other contraband drugs at the border
areas.10
Usually the children coming from poor economic background are sent to
development centers11 or jail.
10. Three first class magistrates of Jessore and Khulna in an interview with the author told that in Khulna and Jessore
hundreds of children carry drugs contraband items.
11. There are three juvenile correction centers in Bangladesh. Two for boys, one in Tongi of Dhaka District and
another in Pulerhat of Jessore District. One for girls, in Kunapara of Kishorgonj. All these correction centers have
newly been named as development centers.
6
2.2.3. Problematic Family: Problematic family constitutes a principal cause for the
deviation of the juveniles. Absence of father or mother due to death or divorce, lack
of parental control, lack of home discipline, bad relation between father and mother,
presence of criminal among the members of family are the principal indications
problematic family. Due to these problems the mental development of children
remains incomplete, for which their behavior become abnormal. The children of 8-14
age group take resort to crime when their parents fail to guide them properly. The
parents and teachers should be more careful of the children so that they cannot get
any chance to commit crime. Children and adolescents tend to follow bad activities of
others if their families and environments are not healthy. 12
If any juvenile first time commits any offence and his/her social condition is good,
he/she is not kept in the development centre, rather kept in the family environment
under the supervision of a probation officer. The child is released after one year,
although law mentions a time frame of 1-3 years. An youthful offender is kept in the
development centre if the family environment is not good. Those he/she is detained
from three months to one year.13
12. Dr. M. Mahmudur Rahman, Professor, Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Dhaka, expressed his
views in Rita Bhoumick, “Juvenile Crime Correction System in Bangladesh,” Law and Our Rights page, The Daily
Star, October 8, 2005.
13. Maleka Khairunnesa, a first class magistrate of Juvenile Court, described her experience in Rita Bhoumick,
“juvenile Crime Correction System in Bangladesh,” Law and Our Rights page, The Daily Star, October 8, 2005.
7
2.2.4. Migration: Migration of deserted and destitute boys to slums brings them in
contact with anti-social elements carrying on prostitution, smuggling of liquor
or narcotic drugs and bootleggers. Thus, they lend into the world of
delinquency without knowing what they are doing is prohibited by law.
2.2.5. Surrounding Environment and Company: sometimes juveniles become
delinquent because of bad company and surrounding environment. Due to
tender age they cannot the far-reaching consequences of their activities. They
can be trapped into surrounding environment of slum area, and smuggling
zone. Because of evil company sometimes juveniles go to brothel, consume
drugs, and commit different kinds of criminal activities.
2.2.6. Action Movie: Action movie and satellite have negative impact on the mind
set of the young boys and girls. The violence and sex depicted in the movies
incite juveniles to go brothel and to commit unauthorized activities .
2.2.7. Besides the aforesaid causes, illiteracy, child labor, etc., are also some of the
contributing factors of aggravating juvenile delinquency.
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Chapter 3
9
(ii) Another mode of treatment of young offender was to remove him from his home
to a correctional institution or a Brutal.
10
Besides, certain special provisions also exist in the Indian Penal Code and the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 in relation to the young and juvenile offenders which
provide for their special treatment and procedure. They are as follows:—
(l) Sections 82; and S 3 of the Indian Penal Code contain elaborate provisions
regarding the extent of criminal liability of children belonging to different age
groups. A child below the age of seven is deli incased, that is, incapable of
committing a crime.
(2) Section 27 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 further suggests that a
lenient treatment to juveniles has already received statutory recognition in the
Indian law. The section provides that if a person below sixteen years of age
commits an offence other than the one punishable with death or imprisonment for
life, he should be awarded a lenient punishment depending on his previous
history, character and circumstances which led him to commit the crime. His
sentence can further by commuted for good behavior during the term of his
imprisonment.
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Chapter 4
JUVENILE JUSTICE ADMINISTRATION AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES IN BANGLADESH:A CRITICAL REVIEW
It is accepted that children who are criminally culpable under the State's penal code
are in conflict with the Law. Historically, in matters of criminal justice, the violation
of law was of greater significance than the age or the immaturity of the offender. This
stemmed from the ideology those children, who were regarded as miniature adults at
that time, did not merit special treatment. However, over the past century and a half
changing perceptions and sustained efforts by specific groups within the civil society,
have led to the development of a criminal justice system with a more child-friendly
orientation. The rationale was that since children are not fully aware of the
implications of their acts they are required, to be treated with sensitivity and care. 14
The administration of justice for minors who are accused of, or alleged as having
breached the penal laws of the country essentially constitutes the juvenile justice
system. Juvenile justice, in the strict sense of the term, denotes the right of children to
have the support at all levels, i.e., the State, the family and the community, in
realizing their rights of survival, protection, development and participation. The
present exercise is an attempt at reviewing the administration of juvenile justice in
Bangladesh and assessing the impact of correctional services on juveniles and
children.
4.1 Administration of Juvenile Justice:
4.1.1 International Perspectives:
The international approach to administration of juvenile justice recognizes the
necessity to have the rights of children redefined and developed in concrete ways
simply because they are a special category of human beings. Accordingly, the United
Nations have taken significant steps mat have contributed to the development of
standards for treatment of children who come into conflict with the law. The
initiatives are described below in brief for an understanding and appreciation of the
standard setting role of the United Nations:
14. Khair, Sumaiya, "Street Children in Conflict with the Law. The Bangladesh Experience", Asia -Pacific Journal on Human
Rights and Law, Vol.2., No. 1, 2001, Kluwer Law International, pp-55-76, 56.
12
4.1.2 Standard Minimum Rules for the Administration of Juvenile Justice (Hie
Beijing Rules) 1985
The Beijing Rules provide minimum conditions for the treatment of juveniles who
come into conflict with law. The Rules explicitly provide for a separate and
specialized system of juvenile justice and underscore that detention of children should
be used as a last resort and that too, for the shortest possible time. The Rules
discourage capital and corporal Punishment for children. Under the Rules children
should be allowed to participate in the legal proceedings. Moreover, care and
education of children must be ensured during the period of detention. At all stages of
the proceedings discretion should be exercised in the best interests of the child.
In terms of treatment the Rules require that children should be treated fairly and
humanely. Measures adopted should be proportionate to the nature of the offender and
the offence. The Beijing Rules however,, refrain from prescribing approaches beyond
setting forth the basic principles of proportionality and the limited use of deprivation
of liberty, a shortcoming that has been resolved substantially by the Convention on
the Rights of the Child.
4.1.3 The Convention on the Rights of the Child 1959
The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) 1989 in Articles 37 and 40 spell out
the rights of children in conflict with the law and ensure basic guarantees and legal
and other assistance for their defense. Article 37 of the CRC ensures that no child
shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest detention, torture or other cruel. In human and
degrading treatment including capital punishment and life sentence. The arrest or
detention of a child must be in conformity with law during which the child shall be
treated with humanity and dignity.
Many of the essential principles of the 19S5 Beijing Rules find expression in Article
40 of the CRC and lend them a binding effect. Article 40 of the CRC provides that
every child alleged as, accused of, or recognized as having violated the penal law
must be treated in a manner consistent with the child's human rights, fundamental
freedoms, sense of worth and dignity. Regard must be had to the age of the child and
the need to promote its reintegration into society- Accordingly, A child must be
presumed innocent until proven guilty, be informed of charges promptly and cannot
be compelled to give testimony or confess to guilt and muse rave access to legal
representation. Articles 37 and 40 are qualified by Article 3 of the CRC which states
that in all actions, whether undertaker by public or private social welfare institutions,
13
courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative bodies, the best interests of the
child shall be a primary consideration.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child is complemented by two other major
documents, which set standards and guidelines for the protection of children in
conflict with the law:
4.1.4 UN Guidelines for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived of their Liberty 1990
These Guidelines apply to all institutions, which detain any person under the age of
18 years. These include institutions for health, welfare or juvenile justice. The
Guidelines advocate the least possible use of deprivation of liberty and discourages
detention in prisons and other closed institutions. Moreover, the Guidelines advise
that children, when detained, should be kept separate from adults in order to protect
them from negative influences. Rather, facilities must promote health of juveniles and
instill in them self respect and a sense of responsibility to enable them to make a
smooth return to society. Access to parents during the period of detention is essential.
4.1.5 UN Guidelines for the Prevention of Juvenile Delinquency (The Riyadh
Guidelines) 1990
The Riyadh Guidelines emphases on the need for integrated and comprehensive plans
for preventing crimes by children and young people. They advocate for formal
mechanisms of crime control as a last resort. The Guidelines also underline the need
for having due regard to the human rights and fundamental freedoms of children,
particularly of those who are at 'social risk', such as children who are homeless,
destitute, abused and so on. Accordingly, laws and procedures should promote,
protect and uphold children's rights. The Guidelines further recommend that children
should be encouraged to participate in policy formulation and implementation of
prevention programmers as active and equal partners.
An examination of the international standards on the administration c: juvenile justice
reveals two broad principles that are of particular significance to children in conflict
with the law. Firstly, that the well being of children who come in conflict with the law
must be ensured and secondly, the children who come in conflict with the law must be
treated in a manner commensurate to their circumstances and nature of the offence. In
other words, the rights of children in conflict with the law must be protected in ways
that will facilitate their reintegration into the; societies and assumption of
responsibilities therein. Therefore, it is essential to weigh the considerations
14
adequately before committing children to formal institutions. In this context, diversion
from formal legal procedures is always an acceptable alternative.
Endorsement of international standards, however, does not automatically guarantee
their practical enforcement in domestic context of states-While international standards
are meant to apply objectively, they essentially lack binding force. Therefore, while
international Conventions may engender certain responsibilities for ratifying states,
they carry no formal obligations in terms of practical implementation. In the
circumstances, it is crucial to develop enabling mechanisms within the domestic legal
system for utilization of international standards in realistic ways.
4.1.6 Administration of Juvenile Justice in Bangladesh
The legal provisions relating to the administration of juvenile justice in Bangladesh
have their roots in colonial laws. The Bengal Code and Prisons Act of 1S94 required
separate trials for children and adults. Guidelines for reformation were contained in
the Reformatory Schools Act 1897. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1898 provides
for the trial of children in juvenile courts, which was also later recommended by The
Bengal Children's Act 1922. These various laws and provisions relating to custody,
protection, trial and treatment of children were eventually consolidated to produce
The Children Act 1974, to be read together with The Children Rules '1976, a
mechanism conceived to protect the child's best interest during all kinds of legal
processes.
The Children Act 1974 contains both procedural as well as substantive components.
The procedural component, supplemented by The Code of Cannel Procedure 1898,
sets out special procedures for juvenile courts and for committing children to the
protection and care of state facilities. The substantive part, on the other hand,
describes offences done to children and prescribes penalties for them.
The Children Act 1974 lays down protections for children in conflict with the law as
well as those who are at social risks. The Act requires that Courts must have regard to
the age and character of the child and other related factors before passing any order. It
provides for separate juvenile courts and forbids the joint trial of child offenders with
adults, even where the offence has been committed jointly. The Act also lays down
measures for the care and protection of destitute and neglected children including
children whose parents /guardians are either alcoholic or who habitually neglect,
abuse or ill-treat children by engaging them in begging or other purposes.
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4.1.7 Delineating the Age of Criminal Responsibility
There is often no uniform standard regarding the age at which a person is necessarily
considered a child. This is primarily because the age premise is likely to vary across
cultures, values and social systems. Article I of The Convention on the Rights of the
Child denotes that a child is a person under the age of 18 years unless, under the law
applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier. In other words, the Convention
permits member states to set the age of majority in conformity with national laws.
This creates problems when, as is the case in Bangladesh, states have domestic
legislation’s that define a child varyingly to suit specific contexts.
Having said that, it is difficult to find a clear-cut definition of a child in international
standards as well. Whereas The Convention on the Rights of the Child regards all
persons under the age of 18 years as children, none of the Rules and Guidelines
relating to administration of juvenile justice., i.e., The Beijing Rules, the UN Rules
for the Protection of Juveniles Deprived of their Liberty or The Riyadh Guidelines (as
discussed later) contains any explicit indication as to who is a child. Rather, the
Guidelines often use the terms 'child' and "young person' in tandem and apply the
term "juvenile' to signify the form of justice system or the type of delinquency. 15 It
appears therefore, that in the context of juvenile justice "it is the manner in which a
child is treated for an offence which dictates whether a child is also a juvenile'. 16
Just as the age of a child is a controversial issue, the age of criminal responsibility,
though seemingly straightforward and elementary as a concept, presents concrete
problems in the administration of juvenile justice. While there is no distinct
international standard on the subject, the CRC and the Beijing Rules enjoin State
Parties to establish a minimum age below which children will be presumed as not
having the capacity to infringe the penal law. In so doing, the beginning of the age
should not be set too low, having due regard to the child s emotional, mental and
intellectual maturity.
16
The penal law in Bangladesh reflects these considerations to a certain extent. The
Penal Code of I860, which sets the age of criminal responsibility states that nothing is
an offence, which is done by person under the age of 9 years (Section 82) 17 and that
full criminal responsibility commences only after the age of 12 years. Section 83 of
The Penal Code provide that an act of a child above 9 years and below 12 years, who
has not attained sufficient maturity of understanding to judge the nature and the
consequences of his conduct, is no offence. It follows therefore, those children under
9 years lack the capacity for crime and incur liability after the age of 12 years; in
between these two ages, criminal responsibility depends on the state of mind. It is to
be noted that apart from The Penal Code, immunity of children below 9 years of age
from criminal responsibility also extends to offences under any other special or local
law of Bangladesh.
The Children Act 1974 which is the principal law relating to the administration of
juvenile justice states that a child means a person under the age of 16 years, and a
youthful offender means a child who has been found to have committed an offence.18
When used with reference to a child sent to a certified home or committed by Court to
the custody of a relative or other fit person means that child during the whole period
of his detention notwithstanding that he may have attained the age of 16 years during
this period.19 In other words, a child who is below 16 years at the time of his
committal will still be considered a child until the end of his detention period even if
he reaches the age of 16 years during this period.
Unless the age of a child is ascertained properly there is every possibility of
misapplication of laws and missed mini strait on of justice. The virtual absence of
birth registration in Bangladesh raises serious difficulties in computing the correct age
of a child in Bangladesh. This problem is of particular significance where children are
brought before the courts and the ma gastritis have to rely on information furnished by
the police who, in the majority of cases, misrepresent the age of the apprehended
child. Although there are provisions in the law that requires a medical examination to
ascertain the age of the child this is hardly conducted in routine time. Consequently,
the child remains in custody like an adult until the conclusion of the medical
verification.20
17. The age of criminal responsibility has been increased from 7 years to 9 years on the 8 th of November 2005 by the Penal Code
(Amendment) Act, 2004.
18. Section 2(f)(n), The Children Act 1974.
19. Section 2(f), ibid.
20. Khair, Sumaiya, 2001, op.cit. p.61.
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4.1.8 Setting the Law into Motion: Procedural Aspects
Although The Children Act 1974 and The Children Rules 1976 are premised on the
best interests of children who come in conflict with the law and who are destitute,
their enforcement in practical terms is rather ineffective and often detrimental the
children. Children traverse through different stages in the criminal justice system from
the moment they come into contact with the law. This section attempts to examine the
procedural aspects of the juvenile justice system and explore the implications they
have for children who come under its jurisdiction.
18
Section 54 of The Criminal Procedure Code 1896 is yet another device that i serves to
oppress, amongst others, children. The police are empowered under this section to
arrest any person on mere suspicion without a ' warrant of arrest. It is common for law
enforcing agencies to indiscriminately arrest and incarcerate street children under the
cover of this law on the slightest of pretexts. Apart from Section 54 of The Criminal
Procedure Code, children's rights and freedom are also compromised by The Special
Powers Act 1974. Which empowers the police to arrest people on suspicion of anti-
state activities? The Special Powers Act 1974 is frequently used to pick up children
who, either happen to be loitering on the streets, or are engaged in political agitation
by political parties during political demonstrations and hurtles (strikes). Street
children in such situations, become victims of circumstances and have their rights
seriously jeopardized. Children arrested under The Arms Act 1873 for possessing and
carrying illegal arms is another instance of victimization of children by adults and an
insensitive legal system.
When it comes to arresting girls the scenario is even more perplexing. Girl children
reportedly make up a much less percentage of juvenile offenders. It is not be so much
that girls breach the law less but more, that, the specific! Ties of their con tact with
the law are not adequately addressed. Classic examples are prostitution and rape
where it is more common for girls to be arrested rather than the perpetrators. In other
words, girls come into conflict with the law more as victims of prostitution and sexual
offences, even if they have actually breached other penal Saws, Since there are no
separate provisions for housing girl offenders, they are customarily branded as
prostitutes and victims of rape in order to acquire for them a place in shelter homes.
Normally, a child may be arrested without a warrant for a cognizable offence 21 under
The Criminal Procedure Code 1896 but s/he cannot be detained in custody for more
than 24 hours. Moreover, if a child under 16 has been charged with a non-bilabial
offence, the officer in charge of the police station may release her/him on bail and
arrange for the child to be placed in a remand home or a safe place until s/he is
brought before the court.22
21. Cognizable offence means an offence for which a police officer may in accordance with the second schedule or under any
law for the time being in force. Arrest without & warrant. See Section -4(f) of The Code of Criminal Procedure, 1889.
22. The Children Act, 1974,Section 48 and 49.
19
There is virtually no separation between inmates who are here for correction and
those who live here in remand. The resultant is a free mixing between boys with
perpetrating and non-perpetrating nature. The consequence is pernicious as children
with less or occasional criminal are compelled to mix with the more hardened types."
The current situation raises serious questions about the places of safety ordained by
law.
Immediately after the arrest of a child, it shall be the duty of the police officer
effecting the arrest to inform the Probation Officer of such arrest in order to enable
the Probation Officer to proceed to obtain necessary information about the child's
family and other material circumstances likely to assist the Court in making its
order.23 At the same time the officer in charge of the police station to which the
arrested child is brought shall inform the parents/guardian of the arrest, if found, and
specifying the date, direct them to attend the court before which the child will
appear.24
The situation on the ground is, however, quite different. Charge sheets are
virtually non-existent and children arrested and detained are not shown the grounds
for arrest nor are their parents duly informed. The police allege that it is frequently
difficult to trace parents and in the absence of adequate facilities they are compelled
to detain children in jails until they are brought before the Magistrate. Consequently,
children are interned with adult criminals who collude with the police officials to
abuse and mistreat the children. Although The Bengal Jail Code under Section 499
expressly provides that none shall be admitted into any jail without a writ, warrant or
order signed by a competent authority, the reality is quite different as children are
frequently locked up with adult criminals without proper authorization.
It is during arrest and interrogation that children are more likely to suffer police
brutality as is evident from a number of studies in the area. Children are allegedly
subjected to various forms of maltreatment ranging from transportation to the police
stations and jails in handcuffs to detention over 24 hours. Physical abuse and torture
are also reported. The practice of placing girl children who are victims of rape or
trafficking in the so-called safe custody increases their vulnerability to victimization
and abuse by the police and other inmates.
20
Chapter 5
The Ideas to prevent Juvenile Delinquency
5.1 Education
Model programs have assisted families and children by providing them with
information. Some programs inform parents on how to raise healthy children; some
teach children about the effects of drugs, gangs, sex, and weapons; and others aim to
express to youth the innate worth they and all others have. All of these programs
provide youths with the awareness that their actions have consequences. This is
particularly important in an era where youth are barraged with sexual and violent
images. Educational programs have the underlying intent of encouraging hope and
opening up opportunities for young people.
5.2 Recreation
One of the immediate benefits of recreational activities is that they fill unsupervised
after-school hours. The Department of Education has reported that youths are most
likely to commit crimes between 2 p.m. and 8 p.m., with crime rates peaking at 3 p.m.
Recreation programs allow youths to connect with other adults and children in the
community. Such positive friendships may assist children in later years. Youth
programs are designed to fit the personalities and skills of different children and may
include sports, dancing, music, rock climbing, drama, karate, bowling, art, and other
activities.
5.3 Community Involvement
Girl scouts, boy scouts, church youth groups, and volunteer groups all involve youth
within a community. Involvement in community groups provide youth with an
opportunity to interact in a safe social environment.
5.4 Prenatal and Infancy Home Visitation by Nurses
Nurses involved in the “Prenatal and Infancy Home Visitation by Nurses” program
pay visits to low income, single mothers between their third trimester and the second
year of their child’s life. During these visits, nurses focus on the health of the mother
and child, the support relationships in the mother’s life, and the enrollment of the
mother and child in Health and Human Services programs. A 15-year follow-up study
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found that mothers and children involved in the program had had a 79 percent lower
child abuse rate, a 56 percent lower child runaway rate, and a 56 percent lower child
arrest rate. Maternal behavior problems also dropped significantly in the studied
group.
5.5 Parent-Child Interaction Training Program
The “Parent-Child Integration Training Program” takes parents and children
approximately 12 weeks to complete. It is designed to teach parenting skills to parents
of children age’s two to seven who exhibit major behavioral problems. The program
places parents and children in interactive situations. A therapist guides the parents,
educating them on how best to respond to their child’s behavior, whether positive or
negative. The program has been shown to reduce hyperactivity, attention deficit,
aggression, and anxious behavior in children.
5.6 Bullying Prevention Program
The Bullying Prevention Program is put into place in elementary and junior high
school settings. An anonymous student questionnaire fills teachers and administrators
in as to who is doing the bullying, which kids are most frequently victimized, and
where bullying occurs on campus. Once teachers and administrators have learned
about how and where bullying occurs at their school, they set up class rules and
facilitate discussions that address the problem. Individual bullies and victims receive
independent counseling. The program succeeds in creating a safer, less hostile
environment for students at minimal cost.
5.7 Prevention Programs within the Juvenile Justice System
A youth entering the Juvenile Justice System has the opportunity to receive
intervention assistance from the state. In the care of the state, a youth may receive
drug rehabilitation assistance, counseling, and educational opportunities. The success
of the Juvenile Justice System is measured by how well it prepares youth to re-enter
the community without committing further crimes. Optimally, all juvenile detention
facilities would catch youths up on their education, provide them with job training,
give them the experience of living in a safe, stable environment, and provide them
with assistance to break harmful habits.
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5.8 The Nebraska Correctional Youth Facility
The Nebraska Correctional Youth Facility (NCYF) is an example of a successful
juvenile detention facility that gears its programs toward restoring delinquent youth.
The facility holds young adult violent offenders and juvenile delinquents who have
been tried in adult court for committing violent crimes. The youngest inmates are 15
and the oldest are 21. NCYF is a “maximum security institution” that was designed to
separate young violent offenders from adult offenders, and to assist young inmates by
providing them with the help they need to change their behavior.
All inmates are required to participate in the educational opportunities provided by the
facility. They are required to meet standards that are set forth by the prison on a
person-by-person basis. Each inmate has the opportunity to earn a GED and to take
community college level courses. The parents of inmates may follow their child’s
progress through communication with staff. While at NCYF, inmates are given the
opportunity to work as teacher assistants, gardeners, recreational leaders, and kitchen
staff. The facility’s recreation program also provides an array of activities, from
basketball leagues to ping-pong tournaments. An annual 10k is held, in which the
inmates race with staff members. NCYF monitors the health of its occupants, in part,
by providing drug rehabilitation counseling and by performing weekly drug tests.
A program unique to NCYF is “Project HEART.” Prisoners who have met specified
behavioral and educational requirements may train a pet dog. The dogs, deemed unfit
for adoption because of behavioral problems, are given a home in the prison yard. A
qualified inmate may be given a dog to take care of for a period of time. He (NCYF
only holds male inmates) may bring the dog with him to his classes and activities. He
is ultimately responsible for teaching the dog. After a period of training, the dogs
receive “Good Canine Citizen Awards” and are set up for adoption through the
Nebraska Humane Society. Inmates whose dogs are placed with a family, are given
the opportunity to talk to the family, via phone, and give them tips on how the dog has
been trained.
As a measure of the success it has experienced in rehabilitating violent offenders,
NCYF received a 99.7 percent initial accreditation in August of 2000 from the
American Correctional Association (ACA), formerly the National Prison Association.
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5.9 Ending Repeat Offenses
Once out of detention, youths face the challenge of readjusting to “free” life. For
many, youth detainment places a halt in a pattern of destructive behavior. Once out of
prison, the youth must create a pattern of life separate from criminal activity. To assist
in this process, courts have attempted to implement helpful social services for former
inmates and their families. Some of these are job placement; school follow-up,
extended counseling, and extended drug rehab. The Functional Family Therapy (FFT)
program assists youth on parole by helping them and their families communicate in
more effective, positive ways.
5.10 Functional Family Therapy (FFT)
The Functional Family Therapy program helps adolescents on probation – and their
families. A family therapist works with the family and helps individual family
members see how they can positively motivate change in their home. The program
works in three phases. During the first phase, the therapist attempts to break down
resistance to therapy and encourages the family to believe that negative
communication and interaction patterns can be changed. In the second phase, family
members are taught new ways to approach day-to-day situations; they are shown how
to change their behaviors and responses to situations. During the third phase, family
members are encouraged to move new relational skills into other social situations
(school, or the workplace, for instance). FFT reduces recidivism rates and juvenile
delinquency at a low cost. Twelve FFT sessions cost approximately one-sixth the cost
of detaining a youth for one month. Another positive effect of the program is that the
siblings of the youth on parole are less likely to commit crimes because of the help
their family has received.
5.11 Scare Tactics
Currently, Americans are steering away from this tactic, as it has proven rather
ineffective, but during the 1990s it was a technique that politicians and the greater
community put much confidence in. Slogans such as “get tough on crime” and “adult
time for adult crime” spoke to the common-sense core of many people who worried
about rising juvenile crime rates. The basic ideology centered on the idea that crime
rates were high because youth were not afraid of facing juvenile detention. General
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opinion held that the system had become too soft; the threat of confinement was not
deterring youth from criminal activity.
Several major shifts occurred during this time:
Juvenile courts gave increased jurisdiction to adult, criminal courts. Courts
authorized easier transfers of juveniles into the adult criminal court and, in
some states, waived their authority over specified crimes.
Youths were sent to adult prisons in increased numbers. Younger offenders
were sent to adult prisons as states tightened their definition of who was a
child, and more court decisions placed youth in adult confinement.
Youths were issued longer prison sentences in the adult system than they
would have been given in the juvenile justice system. Most of those sentenced,
however, were not required to serve the full length of their prison terms.
The harsher penalties that came with the era of hard-time scare tactics were intended
to lower crime rates and to express to youth that crime would not be tolerated. These
penalties, however, did not achieve their intended effects. The approach was grounded
in the idea that youth could be managed through fear. But fear was not a forceful
impetus to motivate youth toward positive behavior. No direct correlation was
witnessed between harsher sentencing and fewer first-time arrests, and youth that had
been placed in the adult system actually had a higher recidivism rate than similar
juveniles placed in juvenile detention facilities.
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5.12 “Juvenile Boot Camp” and “Scared Straight”
In the years that “get tough on crime” policies were being established, various new
programs were also attempted. One such program, Juvenile Boot Camp, received high
publicity but had little success. “At risk” youth were placed into intense, structured,
severe environments that were modeled after military boot camps. The Juvenile Boot
Camps were intended to teach youth about structure and discipline but their success
rates, which were measured based on their ability to prevent kids from committing
future crimes, were low. For some youth, the programs were actually counter-
productive. Another program, “Scared Straight,” brought parole/probation youth into
interactions with adult prisoners through meetings or short-term incarcerations. The
program was designed to make young offenders frightened of the violent adult prison
system. According to the Surgeon General at the time, the program was not
effective.25
25. www.lawyershop.com
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Chapter 6
Conclusion
A child is born innocent and if nursed with tender care and attention, he or she will
blossom with faculties physical, mental, moral and spiritual into a person of
excellence. On the other hand neglect of basic needs, bad company and other abuses
and temptations would spoil the child and likely to turn him a delinquent.
Juvenile delinquency is an inextricable problem for any human society. It is a
problem that persists in our society and also all over the world to a perceptible degree.
A child is born innocent and it nourished with tender case and attention he or she will
be a person of statute and excellence. To understand the problem is real perspective it
is necessary to understand the meaning of delinquency and its significance is the
social background of our society. On the other hand, noxious surrovsdings, neglect of
basic needs bad company and other abuser and temptations would spoil the child and
likely to turn him a delinquent.
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Reference
Books :
1. Sheikh Hafijur Rahman Karzon – Theoretical and Applied Criminology, Palal
Prokashoni (First Edition)
2. Prof. N.V. Paranjape – Criminology and Penology, Modified upto 26th January
2005.
3. Dr. Sumaiya Khair – The Dhaka University Studies, Part 1 Vol XVI (2)
4. Mohammad Afsaruddin, juvenile Delinquency in Bangladesh, University of
Dhaka, Dhaka, 1993, p, 137.
5. Abul Barkat, “Development-freedom-Empowerment in the context of poverty
and Deprivation in Bangladesh.”
Journal :
6. Juvenile Crime correction system in Bangladesh, The Daily Star, October 8,
2005.
Websites :
7. www.Answers.com,last visited at17th march,2010
8. www.The free dictionary.com, last visited at17th march,2010
9. www.uslegal.com, last visited at17th march,2010
10. www.aboutjuveniledelinquents.com, last visited at18th march,2010
11. Pearce, www.legal-explanations.com, last visited at18th march,2010
12. www.allacademic.com, last visited at18th march,2010, last visited at19th
march,2010
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