A newborn baby boy lodged in a sewage pipe directly beneath a toilet has been rescued by firefighters in eastern China.
Suggestions that the child had been dumped have been revised after it emerged that the 22-year-old unmarried mother of the baby was the one who raised the alarm.
According to a police source in
Jinhua, in the eastern province of Zhejiang, the woman gave birth unexpectedly
when she went to the lavatory on Saturday, and the newborn fell into the squat
toilet.
The mother, who had hidden her
pregnancy, telephoned her landlord, claiming she heard "weird noises"
in the pipe, and the proprietor called police after spotting the infant.
Firefighters had to remove the
pipe, reported to be 10cm (three inches) in diameter, and take it to a nearby
hospital, where doctors carefully cut around it to rescue the baby inside.
They spent nearly an hour taking
the tube apart piece by piece with pliers and saws and finally recovered the
5lb (2.3kg) boy, whose placenta was still attached.
From the time he was found until
when he was taken out, the child - named Baby 59 from the number of his
hospital incubator - was stuck in the tube for two to three hours, according to
the policeman who declined to be named.
The woman was on the scene during
the entire rescue process ... and admitted (she was the mother) when we asked
her," he said, adding they were still looking for the boy's father.
"We need further
investigations to find out if she had any malicious intentions" before
deciding whether the mother would be charged, he added.
According to the officer:
"The baby is very healthy now and can be released from the hospital."
But the mother was in a serious
condition due to complications from the delivery, he added.
Video footage of the rescue was broadcast nationally
overnight before details of the unexpected birth emerged.
The news triggered hundreds of thousands of comments
on China's hugely popular Weibo service, which is similar to Twitter, with
users expressing good wishes for the baby.
One user, If-Free, said watching the rescue left her
distraught.
"Seeing the little one wriggling and groaning as
the pipe was torn apart bit by bit wrings my heart ... You've lived through the
hardest moment in your life and your future will definitely be smooth,"
she said.
There are frequent reports in Chinese media of babies
being abandoned, often shortly after birth.
The problem is attributed to factors such as young
mothers unaware they were pregnant, the birth of an unwanted girl in a society
which puts greater value on boys or China's strict family planning rules.
No comments:
Post a Comment