New Delhi: Pilandemi Orphans During the Covid-19 pandemic cannot be expected to run in the procurement of documents to utilize the benefits of their welfare scheme entitled, the Delhi High Court underlined on Monday.
“It is unfair to expect children who lose their parents to buy certificates and documents.
The Delhi government must adopt a simple and easy-to-implement procedure,” Judge Judge Vipin Sanghi and Jasmet Singh.
The bench added that “when you don’t get food, every hour, every day important”.
Side view and procedure are intended to be carefully followed.
But in extraordinary time like this, it is reasonable and sensitive as important.
The high court is correct.
The government must find ways outside the regulatory book to help those who really need a scheme to float by the Government of Delhi and the center.
Of the seven siblings, five, including the only son, is an underage child, while the oldest is 23 years old.
The youngest child is four years old and needs to be treated at school, the court is told by advice for an NGO.
“Because the scheme has been framed to provide benefits, especially for children, the government’s approach must be proactive to provide benefits …
We hope the main secretary after meeting with all stakeholders will destroy all these problems.” The bench recorded more Continue, look for status reports.
The court also associated in the state legal service authority of Delhi (DSLSA) to assist in the documentation process of orphans and rapid benefit grants for them.
The court was informed by Advocate Prabhsahay Kaur, who represented Bachpan Bachao Andolan’s NGO, that these children were given to basic rations and school books by the Child Welfare Committee, but still desperately need maintenance and support and impractically possible.
They approach the committee for their daily needs such as milk, rations, medicines, etc.
Kaur further said the brothers were given a one-time assistance of Rs 10,000 and offered small jobs, which must be accepted to meet their basic needs because there were no relatives who took care of them and they were struggling for the existence of basic even though they refused to continue to approach authority who is looking for help.
Senior advocate Rahul Mehra proposed that the implementation of the scheme for Ex-Gratia grants is taking the time because document verification must be made.
“In the end, they (children) want their rights.
This is your policy, why should it be so long? It must come from your side without our nuding.
Then it will be called progress.” The court was also told that there were 6,200 children Children who lost one parent during a pandemic and 292 children who had lost their parents and these numbers tended to change as and when new data was collected.