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Bengaluru Daycare Horror: Toddlers Locked in Washing Machines at IT Campus

India news LIVE updates, 2 July 2026: Bengaluru daycare horror — toddlers stuffed into washing machines

By Ananya IyerPublished 2 July 2026· 2 min read
Bengaluru Daycare Horror: Toddlers Locked in Washing Machines at IT Campus
Bengaluru Daycare Horror: Toddlers Locked in Washing Machines at IT Campus

Five caregivers booked as police launch a massive probe into systematic abuse at a premium corporate creche facility.

The silence of a workday at a major tech hub has been shattered by reports of unimaginable cruelty. Parents, who trusted a premium daycare facility inside the Capgemini campus in Bengaluru, are now grappling with the discovery that their toddlers were subjected to harrowing abuse, allegedly including being stuffed into washing machines and sprayed with high-pressure toilet jets as punishment for crying.

The scale of the alleged abuse at the campus facility has left the city reeling. Bengaluru police have registered a case against five caregivers, following video evidence that surfaced, purportedly showing the children being locked inside washing machines and confined in bathrooms. As the investigation deepens, the facility has shuttered its doors, leaving hundreds of families in a state of shock and uncertainty regarding the safety of their children in corporate-managed spaces.

A Broken Trust

For the working parents of India’s Silicon Valley, the convenience of an on-site creche is often the only way to balance demanding professional lives. However, this incident casts a long, dark shadow over the lack of stringent oversight in private childcare facilities. While the police investigation is in its early stages, the allegations suggest a systemic failure in monitoring the staff entrusted with the most vulnerable.

Legal teams and authorities are currently combing through the facility's operations. The booking of five individuals serves as a grim reminder that background checks and periodic audits are not merely administrative formalities but absolute necessities in the childcare sector.

The Bigger Picture

This incident is not an isolated tremor in the landscape of urban safety. Across India, whether it is the lethal electrical infrastructure in waterlogged Mumbai or the recent police salary scams caught by automated audits in Chhattisgarh, there is a recurring pattern of oversight failure.

When corporate entities provide childcare, they effectively become the custodians of a family’s future. The Bengaluru tragedy highlights a critical need for standardized, state-mandated safety protocols that go beyond mere internal corporate policies. If an institution as large as the one in question cannot guarantee the safety of infants from such egregious physical abuse, then the current model of "campus-based care" requires a radical, transparent overhaul. The question remains: how many more red flags will it take before the regulation of private creches is treated with the same urgency as the IT services themselves?

By Ananya Iyer
World Affairs Correspondent

Ananya Iyer covers global affairs with an Indian lens for PoliticalPedia.