The Star Late Edition

Two newborns found dead in dustbins

Around 300 children a month found abandoned

- TANKISO MAKHETHA tankiso.makhetha@inl.co.za

SOME of them somehow survive shallow graves, hours in murky pit toilets and cold, stinking dump sites.

But this wasn’t to be for two baby girls who were found dead in Sandton – one after being found stuffed in a bread packet over the weekend.

The first baby was found yesterday in a dustbin near a shopping centre in Woodmead and the other newborn was found in a dustbin across the road from Netcare Sunninghil­l Hospital on Friday night.

Netcare spokespers­on Chris Botha said paramedics from Sunninghil­l Hospital were alerted by a homeless man who said he had found a baby in a rubbish bin across the road.

“The paramedics went across the road and found a newborn baby girl stuffed into a bread packet.

“Tragically, they found that the baby had died before their arrival. The cause of death will form part of the police investigat­ion,” Botha said.

In a separate discovery, a baby girl was found wrapped in a blan- ket in a dustbin in Woodmead.

Identical to the Sunninghil­l discovery, a man going through the dustbin found the baby.

ER24 spokespers­on Werner Vermaak said the man called security guards at the shopping complex, who later contacted paramedics and the police.

Sadly, there was nothing that paramedics could do for the little girl. It appeared as if she had been dumped during the early hours of the morning. She was later declared dead by paramedics, he said.

Despite there being no statistics quantifyin­g the number of abandoned children, reports have suggested that around 3 500 children are abandoned annually in South Africa.

This translates to around 300 children a month.

In her research paper titled “Sad, Bad and Mad”, Deirdre Elizabeth Blackie said 65% of abandoned children are newborns, 90% of whom are under the age of one.

Blackie further said 70% of children are abandoned in unsafe areas which include toilets, drains, sewers and gutters. These were followed by rubbish sites, dustbins, landfills, parks and the veld.

It is estimated that 200 babies are found abandoned in greater Joburg and Soweto every month.

On average, only 60 are found alive each month.

The Star’s sister paper, the Pretoria News, has previously reported that dumped babies have become a large part of nonnatural, undetermin­ed deaths in the zero to four-years-old age group.

This newspaper report was based on commentary provided by the Gauteng Forensic Pathology Service.

“These babies in dustbins, gutters or dumps – who are aborted or miscarried newborns being disposed of – are becoming a large part of undetermin­ed deaths (of young children) in Gauteng,” said Professor Jeanine Vellema during a recent presentati­on on fatal injuries in the province.

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