Bengaluru daycare abuse case: FIR against 5 staff over toddler assault videos
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
An alleged case of systematic abuse of toddlers at a private daycare centre in Bengaluru has triggered a police investigation, with an FIR registered against five staff members of the Society General Baby Care Centre in Brookefield after videos and photographs purportedly showing children being physically assaulted were brought to the attention of authorities. The case was registered at the HAL Police Station on the basis of a complaint filed by Tilakesh Kumar (32), a state government employee and resident of K.R. Puram.
The Accused and Charges
The five staff members named in the FIR are Manjula, Vijayalakshmi, Bhavani, Sindhu, and Bindu. The daycare facility operates on the premises of a firm in Brookefield. The case has been booked under Section 351(2) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita and Section 75 of the Juvenile Justice Act, which deal with assault and cruelty to children respectively. No arrests have been announced as of the time of reporting.
What the FIR Alleges
The allegations detailed in the FIR are deeply disturbing. According to the complaint, staff members allegedly placed children inside a washing machine in an apparent attempt to frighten them. The accused are also alleged to have forced children to sit on a western-style toilet, inserted a water pipe into their mouths, and forcefully released water. The FIR further alleges that children were locked inside bathrooms as a form of punishment.
Police said that during preliminary inquiry, it emerged that the accused allegedly resorted to these methods whenever children cried or caused a disturbance — conduct that, if verified, would amount to both physical and psychological abuse of minors in their care.
How the Case Came to Light
The alleged abuse first came to light after the Child Helpline received videos and photographs purportedly documenting the incidents inside the facility. Child Helpline officials subsequently approached the HAL Police, who registered the case and launched a formal investigation. The videos reportedly show children crying in visible fear inside the daycare premises.
This is a significant detail: the case was not flagged by the daycare management or any internal whistleblower, but surfaced through a child protection helpline — raising questions about oversight mechanisms at private childcare facilities operating within corporate or residential premises.
Investigation Status
Investigators are currently working to verify the authenticity of the video and photographic evidence, and are in the process of recording statements from all parties concerned. Police confirmed that the inquiry is ongoing and that further action will follow once the evidence is examined. The facility, which operates within a corporate setting in Brookefield, is under scrutiny over whether it held the required licences and clearances to run a childcare centre.
The case has drawn attention to the broader issue of regulatory oversight of private daycare centres in urban India, where working parents increasingly depend on such facilities with limited visibility into daily operations. Child rights advocates are likely to demand tighter inspection norms in the wake of this incident.