The Star Malaysia

Indian charity shocked over ‘sold baby’

Mother Teresa home vows to look into matter after a nun and staff accused of traffickin­g

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New Delhi: An Indian charity founded by Mother Teresa expressed outrage and regret after a nun and an employee were arrested for allegedly selling infants for adoption for potentiall­y thousands of dollars.

“We are completely shocked by what has happened in our home in Ranchi (in eastern India). It should have never happened,” said the Missionari­es of Charity organisati­on, set up by the Catholic mission ary nun in 1950.

“It is against our moral conviction­s. We are carefully looking into the matter. We will take all the necessary precaution­s that this kind of incident never happens again,” a statement said yesterday.

Police arrested the two suspects at one of the charity’s homes in the capital of Jharkhand state on Thursday following allegation­s that at least five infants were sold.

The scandal blew up earlier this week after local child welfare authoritie­s informed police about a newborn missing from the home, which is meant to care for unwed pregnant women and mothers in distress.

The staff said initially that the baby was taken by her unwed mother but then police found evidence that the two suspects sold the child to a couple from neighbouri­ng Uttar Pradesh state for nearly US$1,700 (RM6,876).

The pair were initially charged with human traffickin­g – punishable by up to five years in prison – but police said they could face more charges as investigat­ions widen.

The hospitals where the children were delivered will also be investigat­ed, police said.

For many couples, India’s legal adoption process is cumbersome and some resort to illegal methods, including by paying bribes to chari ties or hospitals.

Born in Skopje, now the capital of Macedonia, Mother Teresa, canonised as a saint after her death in 1997, became a global symbol of compassion but she was also a controvers­ial and divisive figure.

She remained fervently opposed to birth control and abortion, describing the latter as “direct murder by the mother herself ” in her speech accepting the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979. — AFP

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