A nurse feeds Baby 59, who is now stable in hospital after being rescued from a sewer pipe. Photograph: Imaginechina/Corbis
He has no name, just a number: Baby 59. But his face is now familiar to millions and wellwishers across China are anxiously monitoring the fate of the tiny newborn after firefighters freed him from a sewage pipe where he was trapped beneath a toilet.
Weighing just 5lbs, the boy was found wedged in the pipe beneath a shared bathroom in a residential building in Jinhua, in China's eastern province of Zhejiang. His placenta was still attached.
Early reports suggested residents heard his cries late on Saturday and raised the alarm – but updates suggested his unmarried mother had been the first to call for help, pretending she had merely come across him.
The extraordinary footage of his rescue showed firefighters sawing away an L-shaped section of the narrow pipe from the floor beneath the bathroom after attempts to pull him out failed. Medics at Pujiang People's hospital helped them to take it apart piece by piece with pliers and saws – a process that took almost an hour. It reportedly had a diameter of just 10cm.
State media said the baby, identified only by the number of his hospital incubator, had a low heart rate when he was admitted and had suffered cuts and bruising, but was now in stable condition.
Police initially said they were looking for his parents and treating the case as one of attempted murder. The Pujiang police bureau later said on its official microblog account that the boy's mother had been located and an investigation was under way.
He said: "The woman was on the scene during the entire rescue process … and admitted [she was the mother] when we asked her." Police had not yet decided whether to file charges and that there was no information on the father.
The single woman, a tenant in the building, told police she could not afford an abortion and secretly delivered the child on Saturday afternoon in the toilet, Associated Press reported. She said the newborn slipped into the sewer pipe and she alerted her landlord after she could not pull the baby out, the state-run news site. The mother told police she cleaned up in the toilet after the delivery. She had managed to hide her pregnancy by wearing loose clothes and tightly wrapping her abdomen.
Bearing a baby outside marriage still carries a stigma in China. The case has provoked horror across China, where footage of the two-hour rescue was broadcast widely. State media said strangers inundated the hospital with gifts of nappies, baby clothes and milk powder, as well as offers to adopt the little boy. But a doctor at the hospital said he would be handed to social services if his parents did not claim him.
Several cases of abandonment have been reported recently, including that of a baby dumped in the trash earlier this month, who is thought to have died despite medical care. Earlier this year, the Beijing Youth Daily said the hospital that treats abandoned babies found in the capital had received more than 10,000 in the past decade. Girls and disabled infants are more likely to be abandoned, due to the preference for boys in China.
While some have suggested abandonments are linked to China's one-child policy of strict birth controls, which can lead to heavy fines for parents who breach the rules, that alone is unlikely to explain the phenomenon. Abortion is readily available and widely used to end unwanted pregnancies or those that breach the quota. The Zhejiang case has striking similarities to cases seen in the US and other countries where women have left their newborn babies in toilets, having been unaware they were pregnant or apparently in denial.
There appeared to be little sympathy for the mother on social media, where users angrily asked how any parent could leave their child in those conditions. "The parents who did this have hearts even filthier than that sewage pipe," one user wrote on the Sina Weibo microblog service.
Not knowing what psychological state the mother of this baby was in during the pregnancy and the birth, might offer a circumstance which can make sense of her actions. For that to happen, it isn't required that they become legitimized in the eyes of anyone.
ReplyDeleteIt is a profoundly sad story which suggests a sense of desperation resulting in a very unbalanced response.
I don't know how anyone can discuss this atrocious event without reference to the policies that operate in China that criminalize unauthorized children. Those right wingers that idolize China as a model state might care to reflect on the consequences of such social brutalism.
Well written piece. This babys' terrible first few hours moved me to tears in part driven by guilt of how good a start to life I and now my children have had.
The mother clearly needs help more than just the punishment she'll get.
I agree that the mother requires professional help. Unfortunately the system in China doesn't work that way. She will be fined and if she can't pay the fine she will spend time in jail. She will receive no help and will not be allowed to keep her baby. I don't think they have the true version of what happened. It all sounds a bit obscure. But I think she made a hasty judgement and instantly regretted it.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment Witchy