Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

CAUSE FOR CONCERN

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congenital ailments, Singh said.

Hospitals take the responsibi­lity of caring for these babies in the absence of state-run homes built specifical­ly for such children.

The staff at Srinagar’s Lal Ded hospital, the largest maternity care in the Valley, rescued a newborn wrapped in plastic and dumped in a garbage pit on a freezing night in January.

They were alerted by a commotion outside — a barking pack of stray dogs and an infant’s haunting wails. The dogs had almost disfigured the baby’s face by the time the staff reached and brought the child to the hospital. The infant recovered and was adopted eventually.

Authoritie­s at Lal Ded hospital said at least five abandoned babies — four girls and a boy — were rehabilita­ted in the past year. People adopted three of them; the other two are being cared for at the hospital.

“Mostly girls are deserted and people suspect the abandoned boy might have been born to an unwed mother,” said Dr Shabir Sediqui, the hospital’s medical superinten­dent.

Doctors and social observers refused to call these instances of people abandoning newborns a growing trend in Kashmir, saying giving such a tag would be alarmist.

According to them, these occurrence­s are getting amplified now because of social media.

“These are small numbers and there were instances in the past as well. The issue is being blown out of proportion,” Sediqui said.

Dr Salim Khan, who heads the department of community health at the government medical college (GMC) in Srinagar, gave three reasons why babies are abandoned “those born out of wedlock, girls born in families that have other girl children, and babies who have congenital diseases”.

It’s not an “alarming trend”, he said, but “a cause of concern and indicative of issues in society”. Social experts are of the view that the abandonmen­ts are a result of unwed mothers facing intense social stigma, and parents unable to look after their child because of mental or physical illnesses.

Besides, many poor families simply consider daughters a burden as they have to be married off with expensive gifts as dowry, the experts say.

According to the 2011 Census, the state’s sex ratio is among the most skewed in the country at 889 women for 1,000 men. And the sex ratio for children below six years dips further to 862 girls per 1,000 boys.

The data raises fears about female foeticide and infanticid­e, although statistics on the number of babies killed or abandoned at birth are obscure. “Society should take care of its moral fabric and make weddings easier. We should be very concerned about extravagan­t weddings,” Khan of GMC, Srinagar, said.

According to Khurshid ul Islam, a sociologis­t and an associate professor at the Institute of Management, Public Administra­tion and Rural Developmen­t in Srinagar, newborns are abandoned in Kashmir because of two reasons: poverty and weakening moral values.

“Today, it is difficult to raise a child owing to increased needs. And when a girl is born, a father thinks about her marriage from day one. We have become extravagan­t in our weddings and social evils are percolatin­g,” he said.

 ?? WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT PHOTO ?? J&K’s sex ratio is among the most skewed in the country, according to the 2011 Census.
WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT PHOTO J&K’s sex ratio is among the most skewed in the country, according to the 2011 Census.

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