The Free Press Journal

Finding homes for unwanted babies!

- AGENCIES

The Centre has ordered all hospitals and orphanages in the country to put up cradles in front of their buildings so that parents can give up unwanted babies safely.

The ‘Palna’ scheme will help bridge the gap between the number of children available for adoption and the burgeoning list of adoptive parents. As of May 2017, there are 1,766 children in child-care institutio­ns across the country, while there were 15,200 prospectiv­e adoptive parents waiting in queue.

“The idea is to encourage parents to come and surrender their babies in the cradles so that they don't abandon them or kill them. It is a humane and yet anonymous way to give up your child,” Women and Child Developmen­t Minister Maneka Gandhi said.

The ministry has already sent out orders for implementa­tion of the scheme even as it is awaits clearance from the Ministry of Home Affairs to set up such cradles in front of police stations. “We want such cradles in places where there is night staff present so that they can take the child in immediatel­y,” the minister said. The cradles will be fitted with a bell by which the staff can be alerted on the arrival of a child. Then the baby can be taken to the local child welfare committee and screened further to evaluate if it is fit for adoption. This ‘Palna’ system is in place in Rajasthan where Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje Scindhia's 2015-16 Ashray Palna Sthal Yojna has been immensely successful. Under the scheme, 65 cradles at medical colleges, district and sub-district hospitals were placed to save new-borns abandoned by their parents.

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