News Headlines, English News, Today Headlines, Top Stories | Arth Parkash
Delhi Police Constable Sunita has reunited 73 missing children with their parents. In Delhi, 73 missing children returned to their parents
Tuesday, 22 Feb 2022 18:00 pm
News Headlines, English News, Today Headlines, Top Stories | Arth Parkash

News Headlines, English News, Today Headlines, Top Stories | Arth Parkash

In the last eight months, Delhi Police Constable Sunita has reunited 73 missing children with their parents, according to officials. In the previous three days, she has also tracked down four children, according to authorities.

They claimed a seven-year-old youngster went missing on Sunday from his house in Indira Camp number 2, Vikaspuri, where he lived with his grandfather.

Police began a search in the surrounding area and analyzed footage from adjacent CCTV cameras. Sunita later tracked down the youngster and turned him back to his grandfather, according to a senior police official.

A 13-year-old girl went missing from her home in the Mayapuri area on February 15. Ms. Sunita, too, tracked the child down in Mayapuri, according to Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police (West) Prashant Gautam.

On February 16, two children and their mother went missing in the Kanjhawala area. According to police, a squad led by ASI Suresh Kumar and Sunita was successful in locating the missing people.

On November 10, 2014, Sunita joined the Delhi Police Force. She was assigned to several units after completing her first training, including the Police Control Room (PCR), the C4i Command Room (CPCR), and Police Headquarters (PHQ), before being relocated to the west district, they added.

She has been assigned to the Anti-Human Trafficking Unit (AHTU) of the west district for the past year, according to authorities.

In 2019, the PHQ proposed a policy to honor police officers who work to locate kidnapped and missing children and reconnect them with their families. They claimed that Head Constable Seema Dhaka of the Samaypur Badli Police Station was the first woman to be promoted out of turn after locating 50 missing children in a year.

The gesture was well received, and she served as an example to others, especially Sunita. 73 missing or kidnapped children have been located by the constable. According to police, fifteen of the children found are under the age of eight, while the others range in age from eight to 16.

The constable is being proposed for out-of-turn promotion to the rank of head constable, according to existing regulations, to recognize her efforts, raise her morale, and encourage others, police noted.