Gulf News

Home run by Mother Teresa’s charity accused of selling babies

Police seal institutio­n, charge nun and another individual with baby traffickin­g

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Indian authoritie­s said yesterday they have sealed a home run by Mother Teresa’s religious order and charged a nun and one other person with baby traffickin­g.

The home in eastern India’s Jharkhand state is run by Missionari­es of Charity, the order set up by Mother Teresa in India, and provides shelter for pregnant unmarried women.

“They have said that at least five to six babies have been sold to childless couples,” police officer Aman Kumar told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview.

“We are investigat­ing to see how the operation was run and how many more children have been given away in the last few years.” The Missionari­es of Charity did not respond to calls for comment.

Arti Kujur, head of the Jharkhand State Child Protection Society, said the home was charging between Rs40,000 Indian (about Dh2,203) and Rs100,000 for each baby, depending on what the childless couple could afford.

Many complaints

“We had been receiving many complaints regarding the functionin­g of this home and were keeping a close watch on them for nearly six months,” he said.

The Missionari­es of Charity stopped organising adoptions in India in 2015 saying they disagreed with government rules that made it easier for single, divorced, and separated people to adopt children.

There have been a number of reports of babies and children being trafficked through charityrun homes and hospitals, which campaigner­s say is driven by a long waiting list for adoption.

The Nirmala Shishu Bhavan home run by the Missionari­es of Charity in Jharkhand state capital Ranchi was required to inform authoritie­s about all babies born there.

“They were selling more babies than what they were handing over to authoritie­s, said Baidnath Kumar, a Ranchi-based child rights activist who had filed complaints against the home.

Kujur said his organisati­on had directed that the credential­s of every home run in the state should be checked. “We hear that babies are being sold in other homes as well and are determined to put a stop to it,” he said.

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