On 29 November 2025, fourteen-year-old Saahil, exhausted after an eleven-hour shift at a Delhi grocery store, paused near a wedding procession in Mansarovar Park. According to The Indian Express, he, like other children, was collecting currency notes thrown by guests, a harmless and opportunistic teenage gesture. The scene turned lethal when off-duty CISF (Central Industrial Security Force) head constable Madan Gopal Tiwari, reportedly drunk, grabbed Saahil, slapped him, and then shot him at close range when the boy dared to question the assault. Times of India confirmed the officer’s immediate attempt to flee and the recovery of the suspected murder weapon. In that single, brutal moment, the vast distance between a child’s innocent act and the State’s lethal violence catastrophically collapsed, forcing us to confront not merely the crime, but the structural permissiveness that made it possible.
Power Without Scrutiny: Homicide by Impunity
Public discourse often attempts to explain such atrocities as sudden rage or alcohol-fueled accidents, but that framing is a dangerous distortion. As Scroll.in noted, while the officer was reportedly intoxicated and had known anger management issues, these factors alone do not result in homicide; the killing of a child in this manner is the consequence of a systemic lethal combination: a weapon in unregulated hands, an institutional culture of tolerance for lapses, the psychological buffer of uniformed power carried without accountability, and a victim with zero social capital, a poor, working-class child. In India, the uniform grants authority, and the weapon grants lethal confidence. When both are divorced from constant scrutiny, accountability becomes a diluted myth. This murder is not a sudden eruption; it is the raw expression of unregulated power.
From Community Celebration to State Negligence
The accused constable was on leave, attending a family wedding, as Moneycontrol reported. Yet, he carried a loaded service weapon into a private, emotionally charged civilian gathering. India’s lack of a firm, enforced policy prohibiting the off-duty carriage of service firearms is not a benign oversight; it is a loophole that permits State-issued ammunition to enter civilian life casually, even carelessly. The presence of that service weapon in the wedding lane reflected not State duty, but State negligence. More troublingly, the lack of anyone questioning its presence reflects a deep-seated social conditioning, an acceptance of power symbols even in wholly inappropriate contexts. This normalization of armed authority is deadly.
Saahil’s Life: A Struggle Against Structural Neglect
The violence against Saahil did not begin with the bullet; it was preceded by structural deprivation. The Indian Express revealed that the fourteen-year-old had left school after his father’s paralysis to become his family’s primary breadwinner, earning a meager ₹6,000 a month. A Republic that vows to protect children must ask how a minor becomes his family’s sole support. Poverty, often relegated to a backdrop, is central here: it determined Saahil was on the road instead of safely at home, that he worked instead of studied, that his family had no safety net, and tragically, that his life could be taken with the expectation of silence. Child labour is a political indictment. A State that fails to secure the childhoods it promises ultimately fails to protect those children from the bullets of its own agents.
The Bullet Followed the Path of Inequality
Violence in a class-stratified society rarely travels randomly; it follows predictable fault lines, moving from the powerful to the powerless. The immense social distance between the armed, trained officer and the working-class child with no institutional backing was the trajectory the bullet followed. When police initially suggested, according to Hindustan Times, that Saahil was an “uninvited trespasser” who initiated a scuffle, the framing itself exposed a dangerous societal interpretation of class: a child collecting stray notes is viewed through a lens of suspicion and criminality, not empathy. Saahil was not a threat; he was a symbol of a social order where protection is granted to some children and punishment to others. Class determined not only how he lived, but how he died.
The Promise Broken: Confronting the Indian State
A Republic is a promise of protection. When a child is killed by an agent of the State, that promise is brutally shattered, as Saahil’s killing exposes a confluence of systemic failures: a failure of supervision for allowing an armed officer into a civilian space; a failure of discipline in the relaxed enforcement of alcohol restrictions for weapons personnel; a failure of welfare that forced a child into the workforce; and a failure of policing culture where anger, authority, and weaponry formed an unholy blend. The result was predictable, and the consequences are irreversible.
Justice: Beyond Punitive, Towards Transformative Change
Punishing the guilty officer is non-negotiable, but it is woefully insufficient. True justice for Saahil demands transformative systemic change, starting with a complete, non-negotiable ban on the off-duty carriage of state firearms into all private and civilian events. This must be coupled with rigorous enforcement of alcohol restrictions and mandatory periodic psychological evaluations for all armed personnel, the establishment of a robust, independent oversight body to investigate all killings involving state actors, welfare reform providing stronger disability and social security benefits for families like Saahil’s, and aggressive, rigorous enforcement of child labour laws in urban and rural spaces. These are not ambitious aspirations; they are the bare minimum required to validate the Republic’s moral claim to democracy.
The Child Behind the Tragedy
Siasat.com revealed the humble aspirations of the child who was lost: Saahil simply wanted to repair his family’s damaged home, support his ailing father, and ensure his siblings could continue their studies. His life, simple and defined by duty, was violently snatched by the very authority that should have protected him. If a child can be shot dead in a public celebration for picking up currency, if a State weapon can be used with such casual brutality, and if poor children remain the easiest targets, the nation must be deeply troubled. Saahil’s killing is not a crime that ends with a chargesheet; it is a question that must trouble the conscience of the nation. India can only honour him by refusing to normalise this violence. The country must commit to a future where guns do not enter weddings, children do not enter the workforce, and uniforms do not become shields for impunity. Until then, this tragedy is not an exception. It is a warning.


