Child buried alived, saved
[Cambodians, EVERY person has dignity.]
A newborn baby girl who didn’t even have a name yet was taken
out of her hospital on Wednesday morning and buried alive allegedly by
her father because he couldn’t bear the sight of her cleft lip.
The baby was born at 3am on Wednesday at Svay Rieng Provincial
Hospital, according to medical staff. Sometime later that morning, Kong
Sok, a 29-year-old Svay Rieng town farmer, took his unwanted daughter to
the Prey Chhlak pagoda, dug a hole in the ground and buried her in a
plot of dirt, where she was left for dead, police say.
Only her cries saved her.
“The monks went looking for it and found a pile of dirt with a baby
inside and they called police. The father says he is so ashamed because
his daughter was born with a cleft lip, so he decided to bury her. It is
really pitiful. She is a healthy baby weighing 3 kilograms, she just
has a cleft lip.”
When the monks found her, she had been in the ground for at least an
hour but was still breathing. She was quickly rushed to an emergency
room. Though the state of her injuries from the burial is unknown, she
is expected to recover.
“The hospital had to insert an oxygen tube, because when she was
brought here she was weak,” Ke Ratha, director of the Svay Rieng Health
Department, said.
Police arrested the father, who is being detained for questioning.
The mother, Heng Ny, 28, was brought to the emergency room to breastfeed
the baby.
Ny told police she was not aware that her husband had buried their
daughter, and had “burst into tears” when her baby was taken away,
according to police reports.
Even though cleft lips and palates are easily corrected, and affect
as many as one in 500 babies in the Kingdom, the birth defect, like
other disabilities and deformities in Cambodia, tends to be heavily
stigmatised.
Wednesday’s incident wasn’t the first time in Cambodia a parent rejected his or her child because of a cleft lip.
“We’ve heard stories of parents abandoning their children on the side
of the road because of cleft lips,” David Fruitman, director of
Operation Smile Cambodia, said.
“Sometimes people blame themselves and think a cleft lip is
punishment. In the Buddhist faith . . . some people think it’s a fault
of the past life of the baby,” he said, adding that some of the clinic’s
patients have reported being afraid to go to school for being mocked or
bullied.
Dr Keo Vanna, director of reconstructive surgery at the Children’s
Surgical Centre in Phnom Penh, said poverty can play a role in rejecting
children born with the disfigurement, as parents who are poor feel
hopeless when presented with what they view as an expensive health
problem.
“They think they need to spend a lot of money on surgery and do not
know there are clinics that will help them free of charge,” he said.
For the buried newborn baby at least, the situation isn’t all bleak.
Several clinics have already offered free, corrective surgery once she
is at least a year old.
“The prognosis is very good for most patients with a cleft lip or
palate,” Vanna said. “Most of the time it’s not a very difficult
surgery.”
No comments:
Post a Comment