India

Manju Verma, accused in Muzaffarpur Shelter Rape Case, Surrenders


The former Bihar minister, accused in the Muzaffarpur shelter home rape case surrendered before the CBI on Tuesday.

New Delhi, Nov 20: Former Bihar minister Manju Verma, accused in Muzaffarpur shelter home rape case, surrendered before the CBI in Muzaffarpur on Tuesday. Verma has been on the run for the last one month with the Bihar police unable to trace her.

The police’s inability to arrest Verma also drew the Supreme Court’s ire. On November 12, the apex court pulled up the Bihar police for its failure to arrest the former minister.

“Fantastic! cabinet minister (Manju Verma) on the run, fantastic. How could it happen that cabinet minister is absconding and nobody knows where she is? You realize the seriousness of the issue that cabinet minister is not traceable. It’s too much,” bench of the SC had said.

Earlier, during a hearing on October 31, the Bihar government told the SC that former social welfare minister Manju Verma has gone into hiding and could not be traced by the police.

The SC said it’s “very strange that the government doesn’t know where its former minister is. All is not well.” The court also directed the CBI to file charge sheet on time so that no accused could be granted bail.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court had asked the Bihar police why Verma has not been arrested in a case related to the recovery of ammunition in a Muzaffarpur shelter home where several girls were allegedly raped.

A bench of Justices M B Lokur, S A Nazeer and Deepak Gupta also directed that Brajesh Thakur, prime accused in the Muzaffarpur shelter homes sexual abuse case, be shifted to the Patiala high security jail in Punjab from Bihar’s Badarpur jail.

Verma’s husband Chandrashekhar was the owner of the home. The alleged sexual exploitation of the girls was first highlighted in an audit report submitted by the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) to the state’s social welfare department. Chandrashekhar had surrendered before a Begusrai court.

Manju Verma had resigned as Bihar state social welfare minister in August. Defending his wife, Verma said, “I am the owner of the house from where the CBI claimed to have found illegal bullets. Manju had nothing to do with it. She should have not been named in this case.”

A team of CBI, investigating the shelter home rape case, had raided the former minister’s house in Patna and Begusarai simultaneously on August 17 and recovered a huge cache of ammunition, following which her husband was booked under Arms Act after the couple failed to give a satisfactory reply.

Director General of Police KS Dwivedi claimed that Verma’s surrender was the result stern action against him with police planning to attach his properties on Monday.

On the other hand, Verma claimed that he was being framed in the sexual abuse case “merely on the basis of an accused officer’s wife’s statement”

Shibha Kumar, wife of the accused child protection officer, Ravi Raushan, had alleged that Verma was a frequent visitor to Balika Griha in Muzaffarpur where 34 minor girls were raped over a period of time. It was run by NGO Seva Sankalp Evam Vikas Samiti, which was owned by Brajesh Thakur, the main accused in the case who is facing trial along with 17 others.


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