Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Nun at Mother Teresa’s charged with selling baby

- By Vidhi Doshi

NEW DELHI — A nun and another employee of Mother Teresa’s charity in India have been charged with selling a baby and are suspected in the sale of three other infants.

Police arrested Sister Konsalia Balsa and charity worker Anima Indwar on Wednesday after the city’s child welfare committee filed a complaint accusing them of selling a baby for $1,740 in the northeaste­rn city of Ranchi.

“We are completely shocked by what has happened in our home in Ranchi,” a statement from the Missionari­es of Charity read. “It should have never happened. It is against our moral conviction­s. We are carefully looking into the matter.”

Police said they were trying to trace three other babies whom they suspect were sold by Balsa and Indwar.

“We don’t know how big this is yet,” said Kotwali police inspector Shyamanand Mandal, when asked whether the charity’s other shelters had been involved in similar activities. “We are investigat­ing.”

The boy sold was born to an unwed teenage girl, Mandal said. Theinfant is in the custody of child protection authoritie­s.

“What these people did — for around 100,000 to 120,000 rupees, they sold the baby to a couple when the baby was less than a month old, sometimes straight from the hospital,” he said.

Adoption can be a convoluted and tedious process in India, and there is a huge demand for babies — especially male heirs who can earn for parents in old age.

But unwed mothers and babies born out of wedlock face stigma in the socially conservati­ve country. Many turn to charities such as Mother Teresa’s for shelter during their pregnancie­s.

Police saidBalsa and Indwar admitted to selling the babies of the women who came to the shelter.

The Missionari­es of Charity was founded in 1950 by Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, known as “Mother Teresa” and canonized a Catholic saint posthumous­ly in 2016.

Although she was famous for giving aid to the poor in India and around the world, her legacy is disputed.

Many criticize her organizati­on for its proselytiz­ing in non-Catholic countries and allegedly illtreatin­g those whom it claimed to help.

 ?? GETTY-AFP ?? A Mother Teresa’s charity nun sits near a court before a hearing on child traffickin­g charges in Ranchi, India.
GETTY-AFP A Mother Teresa’s charity nun sits near a court before a hearing on child traffickin­g charges in Ranchi, India.

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