Childhood Lost in Crime World

Dr Suresh Mathew Dr Suresh Mathew
20 Sep 2021

We read with interest reports about teenagers in the US going on a shooting-spree. They are seen as blood-chilling incidents happening in some distant land. They are disregarded as the manifestation of loose western culture. Hardly ever we thought that a culture akin to it is in the making in India, contrary to the ethos we boast of. But, reports of teenagers going on killing-spree, emerging from various places in India, have come as a rude shock. Cases of youngsters hatching cold-blooded plots to commit gruesome acts of violence are hitting headlines routinely, shaking the complacent conscience of people.

It is not just a few cases like that of 20-year-old Shobit, found lying in a pool of blood in an upmarket apartment in Delhi, who was done to death apparently by another boy; teenager Khushboo was beheaded in Ranchi for spurning a lover; two minor boys in Pune killed their schoolmate, a Class 8 student; a group of Delhi teenagers beat a man to death with cricket stumps when he stopped them from playing cricket in front of his house; a minor smashed the head of another minor over an online game in Mangalore; a Jammu boy was killed by his peers over the now banned PUBG. Such incidents are becoming regular like similar gruesome crimes perpetrated by adults. 

What is setting alarm bells ringing is that most of the crimes committed by teenagers have a treacherous link to money, drugs, sex and online games. These compelling cravings are intertwined beyond the control of impressionable minds. Unfortunately, most parents fail to see the criminal traits taking shape in their children’s minds. Caught in the web of these devious desires, the young minds go to any length to fulfill them. Help from dubious peers take them to the bottomless pit of crimes. Statistics confirm that juvenile delinquency has taken a dangerous shift with money and sex being the driving factors unlike earlier days when children indulged in petty crimes and street brawls. The figures in this regard are revealing – every year, as many as 42,000 cases are registered of children below the age of 18 killing, raping and stealing. Some of the perpetrators are below the age of 12.  

Psychologists and experts attribute the rising criminal tendencies among teenagers to the breakdown in family relationships. Filial feelings at home, peer support from community, and a sense of solidarity given by religious, social and cultural institutions -- a source of comfort for the teenagers in times of trouble -- are slowly vanishing. The feeling of belonging is disappearing. The family environment has a lot to do with minors entering the world of crimes. Experts point out that normalizing violence at home often leads children on the same path with little fear. The problem is the surroundings in which one is growing up, not with the child. If the child is growing up in a culture of violence, chances are that he or she too would imbibe the same culture; in fact, they would be one step ahead on the path of gruesome activities. The solution to this lies with the family and the society. c  
 

Crimes committed by teenagers Teenage crimes Crimes committed by minors Crime in children

Recent Posts

She lost her husband in the attack, yet said she gained two Kashmiri brothers—an almost unbelievable testament to humanity rising above terror, even as the absence of security exposed the failure that
apicture A. J. Philip
05 May 2025
Amid grief, Kashmiris condemned terror and offered aid, while media and political voices stoked communal hatred. True patriotism lies in unity, accountability, and empathy—the values that can heal Ind
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
05 May 2025
India's decision to include castes in its next census marks a historic shift. It confronts a deep-rooted social reality that has long been ignored. Depending on its execution and the will to act, this
apicture Dr John Singarayar
05 May 2025
On Labour Day, we celebrate workers—yet ignore gig workers who power our lives silently, without rights or recognition. Their struggles, masked by apps and algorithms, demand urgent legal protections.
apicture Jaswant Kaur
05 May 2025
The discreet swearing-in of a judge and renewed concerns over the collegium system have reignited debate on judicial transparency. This raises questions about executive influence, institutional accoun
apicture Dr. Olav Albuquerque
05 May 2025
Fr Vadakkekara may have departed from this world, but he lives on—in the articles he edited, the writers he mentored, the truths he upheld, and the lives he touched. His was a life of praxis—where bel
apicture Justice Kurian Joseph
05 May 2025
I imagine these WhatsApp warriors in an actual warzone — trudging through mud, dodging bullets, and looking for the "Forward" button on a grenade. Most would faint at the sight of a real gun, or worse
apicture Robert Clements
05 May 2025
Pope Francis is bowing out in this special jubilee year of hope, which he has been leading from the front even as he has braved prolonged health concerns. As he passes on and the world bids goodbye to
apicture George Plathottam
28 Apr 2025
Francis' legacy can be summarised in four keywords that reflect powerfully and prominently in his writings, discourses, actions, and life: joy, hope, mercy, and peace.
apicture Bp Gerald John Mathias
28 Apr 2025
Pope Francis redefined leadership through humility, inclusion, and service. He stood with the marginalised, prioritised mercy over judgment, championed ecological justice, and called for reform rooted
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
28 Apr 2025