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NEW DELHI (UCAN) --
Church officials say they will back a government
investigation into Sacred Heart School in Chandigarh,
which expelled a girl a month after she had been
molested by a senior police officer.
The girl, Ruchika Girhotra, 14 at the time, subsequently
committed suicide.
Girhotra's parents and friends say the school acted
under pressure from the officer, S. Rathore, who was
then director general of police in Haryana state.
Rathore's daughter was Girhotra's classmate.
The Chandigarh administration this week seized school
records as part of a magistrate's inquiry into the role
played by the school.
Sister S. Sebastina, the principal of the school now and
in 1990 when Girhotra was expelled, is expected to face
questioning as to why she threw the girl out.
The school has avoided the media since the scandal broke
but many people have expressed their shock and disbelief
on the alumni's Facebook page.
Sacred Heart School is managed by the Clarist Franciscan
Missionaries of the Most Blessed Sacrament. Reports
suggest the school gave "unpaid fees" as the reason for
expelling the girl.
Father Babu Joseph, spokesperson of the Catholic
Bishops' Conference of India (CBCI), says the Church
will support any investigation aimed at unearthing the
facts.
The Divine Word priest, however, told UCA News that
since the case is being investigated, it would be
premature to judge the school. He said he wants the
probe to find out "the circumstances" that led to the
girl's expulsion and her tragic death.
Montfort Brother Mani Mekkunnel, national secretary of
the Conference of Religious India, also welcomed the
probe.
"We should stand for the truth and not bow before
corrupt officials who have different motives," he said.
"We should help the victim get justice even though it is
late."
Brother Mekkunnel hoped the controversy would help "our
schools and institutions" prepare better for any similar
cases in future.
Meanwhile federal law minister Veerappa Moily on Dec. 30
said the government plans to charge Rathore with
abetting the girl's suicide, a crime that carries a
minimum 10-year jail sentence.
The public outrage erupted after Dec. 21, when a special
court of the federal Central Bureau of Investigation in
Chandigarh held Rathore guilty, but awarded a mere
six-month prison term and 1,000-rupee (US$21) fine.
Another court denied Rathore anticipatory bail on Dec.
30, a day after the Haryana police registered two fresh
cases against him.
In one, Rathore was accused of lodging false cases
against Girhotra's brother and trying to kill him, and
the other of fabricating her autopsy report.
Girhotra's family say the police officer persistently
harassed them to withdraw the complaint against him,
which helped drive the girl to suicide.
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