New Delhi: The forensic team of AIIMS Delhi is visiting Chitrakoot in Uttar Pradesh to examine the case of a paedophile, who is a serial offender of child sex abuse and pornography of over 40 minor boys, in a first of its kind case referred to the AIIMS by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for medico-legal opinion including physiological and psychiatric examination of the accused.
According to doctors at the AIIMS, the accused has sexually molested and abused minors - at least 40 boys (5 to 16 years of age), recorded videos of the act and circulated it on dark websites for fun.
The institute's forensic department has constituted a medical board of nine doctors under the chairmanship of (Prof) Dr Sudhir Gupta, head of the forensic unit.
"The case is referred from CBI to us (AIIMS forensic department) on December 11 for medico-legal opinion including physiological and psychiatric examination of the accused, a serial offender of child sex abuse and pornography of more than 40 minor boys. We are sending a team of doctors to Chitrakoot on Wednesday for further investigation of the crime site and recording the statement of victims," Dr Gupta told ANI.
He added that such incidents of child pornography are reported in America and other European countries due to the high vigilance of the government.
"The AIIMS team will conduct a medical examination of victim boys who were abused sexually. The medical analysis involves mental, psychological, and psychiatric health of children and collection of blood samples to investigate the sexually transmitted disease in the children," said Dr Gupta.
"Child sex abuse and its pornography is a heinous crime and, most of the time, it gets underreported. In this case, too, there was no complaint registered until it was reported by Interpol to the Indian government. The accused used to target minor boys of their acquaintances, relatives, and neighbours," Dr Abhishek Yadav, assistant professor in the forensic department at AIIMS said, adding that societal awareness is important that not only strangers but even people familiar to us can harm younger children.