Free Web Submission http://addurl.nu FreeWebSubmission.com Software Directory www britain directory com education Visit Timeshares Earn free bitcoin http://www.visitorsdetails.com CAPTAIN TAREK DREAM: A woman has been charged with attempted murder following the discovery of a newborn baby boy in a drain in Sydney's west - فتاة غير متزوجة تلقي طفلها حديث الولادة في بالوعة صرف

Sunday, November 23, 2014

A woman has been charged with attempted murder following the discovery of a newborn baby boy in a drain in Sydney's west - فتاة غير متزوجة تلقي طفلها حديث الولادة في بالوعة صرف

بالفيديو والصور.. فتاة غير متزوجة تلقي طفلها حديث الولادة في بالوعة صرف

عثرت الشرطة اليوم الأحد على رضيع حديث الولادة في بالوعة للصرف الصحي في سيدني.

وبحسب ما نشر عثر كل من "ديفيد اوتى" وابنته 18 عاما على طفل حديث الولادة ملقى داخل حفرة عمقها نحو 2.5 متر ومغطاة بلوح خرسانى أثناء ركوبهما الدراجات بالقرب من منطقة "كويكز هيل" بسيدنى، بعد أن سمعا بكاء شديدا لشيء ظنا أنه حيوان يتألم فأبلغا الشرطة التي قامت بكشف الغطاء لتكتشف أنه طفل رضيع.

عثر على الطفل ملفوفا بالبلاستيك ومغطى بغطاء يخص أحد المستشفيات وما زال الحبل السرى متصلا به، كما تظن الشرطة أنه ولد منذ أسبوع واحد.

وقال مفتش شرطة نيو ساوث ويلز إنه تم التعرف على أم الطفل التي وجد أنها غير متزوجة وسيوجه إليها تهمة الشروع في قتل، وتحوم الشكوك حول رجل هندى كان يحوم حول المنطقة ربما ساعد الأم في جريمتها.

Mother of baby boy found abandoned in drain has been charged with attempted murder... as police allege child was there for almost FIVE DAYS

-The 30-year-old mother of a baby boy found in a drain has been charged with attempted murder
    Police allege the baby had been in the drain since last Tuesday

-It is understood the little boy was born on Monday
    He has been moved from a serious to stable condition 

-He was found by cyclists beside the M7 at Quakers Hill near the overpass after they heard him crying and thought it was an animal 

-Members of the public and police helped lift the 200kg covering of the storm drain and two officers climbed down to rescue the baby 

-The baby was wrapped in plastic and a hospital blanket and still had a peg attached to it's umbilical cord

-It appears that the child was dropped from the height of 2.4 metres

-Suspicions regarding a man of Indian appearance seen in the area just moments after the baby was heard crying have been 'put to bed'


The mother of a baby boy who was found abandoned in a Sydney drain has been charged with attempted murder.

The woman was charged yesterday and refused bail, as is accused of leaving her son in a 2.4 metre deep drain in Quakers Hill in Sydney's west when he was just one day old.

She will appear at Blacktown Local Court today.

Police will allege the child, which is now in a stable condition in hospital, lay in the drain from Tuesday until he was found on Sunday morning.

Found: The baby boy was abandoned in a drain near the M7 in Sydney
 
Found: The baby boy was abandoned in a drain near the M7 in Sydney
The bottom of the drain where the baby boy lay for reportedly up to five days after he was dropped 2.4 metres
 
The bottom of the drain where the baby boy lay for reportedly up to five days after he was dropped 2.4 metres
 
The baby boy is understood to have been pushed into the drain through the small gap (pictured above). It took six people to remove the concrete slab on top, which weighed more than 200 kilograms 
 
The baby boy is understood to have been pushed into the drain through the small gap (pictured above). It took six people to remove the concrete slab on top, which weighed more than 200 kilograms

Inspector David Lagats told Daily Mail Australia that the woman is of Pacific Islander background and lives in Sydney's west.

Police are yet to locate the father of the child and have confirmed the mother is not married.

Earlier, police had suspicions about an Indian man in an orange shirt, who was seen in the area around the time the baby was found crying in the drain.

However Inspector Lagats said that the man was not under investigation: 'Police are putting these rumours to bed’. 
 

The newborn was found underneath the concrete slab (pictured) after he was thrown into the 2.4 metre deep drain below, through a gap underneath the slab

The newborn was found underneath the concrete slab (pictured) after he was thrown into the 2.4 metre deep drain below, through a gap underneath the slab
Inspector David Lagats confirmed to Daily Mail Australia that they have gained enough information to lay charges against the 30-year-old mother, who was allegedly responsible for leaving the baby in the drain
 
Inspector David Lagats confirmed to Daily Mail Australia that they have gained enough information to lay charges against the 30-year-old mother, who was allegedly responsible for leaving the baby in the drain

NSW Police Media told Daily Mail Australia that it is suspected the baby boy was placed in the drain as far back as last Tuesday.

Although police originally believed the baby was two to three days old, it is now understood the little boy was born last Monday.

The 30-year-old mother was identified after officers made a direct appeal to the family of the boy.

She was admitted to Blacktown Hospital on Sunday evening after she complained of a stomach ache whilst being questioned by police, according to Nine News.

She was interviewed at Blacktown Police Station in western Sydney while her son remained at the Children's Hospital at Westmead.
 
David Otte and his daughter Hayley, 18, identified the baby down the drain and contacted police
 
David Otte and his daughter Hayley, 18, identified the baby down the drain and contacted police

Investigators said she had been found through door knocking and checking medical records.

David Otte and his 18-year-old daughter Hayley were two of the four cyclists who discovered the baby in a stormwater pit off the M7, at Quakers Hill, at 7.30am today.

They initially thought that the sounds were a kitten – but then Mr Otte realised that the cries were human.

'I've got two kids of my own so I know what a baby screaming sounds like,' he said.

'It was so intense; you couldn't not tell it was a baby. We couldn't see it but we could hear it. It was distressed,' he told The Sydney Morning Herald. 
 

 
The drain was covered by a concrete slab which weighed over 200kg and took six people to lift, including two police officers who had arrived at the scene.

They were then able to extract the baby boy, who was wrapped in a striped hospital blanket covered in dirt with the peg still attached to his cut umbilical cord.

Inspector David Lagats said that police believe the baby dumped through a small gap at the top of the drain, underneath the concrete slab.

Workmen use metal tools to move the 200kg concrete slab covering the drain where the baby was found
Police have indicated that the hole covering the storm drain was just large enough for the baby to fit through

Police have indicated that the hole covering the storm drain was just large enough for the baby to fit through
Authorities are investigating the lead that the newborn boy was dropped from the height of 2.4m
 
Authorities are investigating the lead that the newborn boy was dropped from the height of 2.4m
'You go through life seeing things but you never ever imagine you'll see something like this', Mr Otte, who only cycles the route once a month, said.


'That baby had no chance if we and the other people hadn't been there. Something made us find that baby today'.

'I'm glad we got there to save him. He was very loud and he wanted to get out.'

The boy was lifted out of the drain by Senior-Constable Mark McAlister who climbed in with another officer to retrieve him.

'How could someone do it? I, myself, have kids and we're expecting a baby in a few more months so it's not good that someone's going through this and has done this to a little one,' he said.

The incident has left Quakers Hill residents in shock .

Graham Bridges, 44, walked the bike track regularly and said it was usually very popular with riders on a Sunday morning.

He said he saw police gathered on the path as he walked back home.

'As I walked passed them, the police asked me if I had seen an Indian looking man around in an orange shirt,' Mr Bridges said.

'Usually I walk that way but I used a different path today... because our dog likes chasing after the bikes.

'It was hot... the baby may not have survived an hour [later]. I'm glad it ended well and that the baby's alive.'

There were fears that the baby may have suffered internal injuries after being dumped in the drain, which had a drop of 2.5m.

At a press conference earlier today, police said that he had no signs of outward injuries but that he was malnourished.

'We all thought the worst but the baby was still alive,' said Inspector David Lagats, who attended the scene.

'Once we found out how far the drop was, we were concerned about the baby's welfare but it was wrapped up pretty well.'

'It's a horrific incident ... but with all the team work from the bystanders too, it was a good result and hopefully the child will survive.' 
 
'It was so intense; you couldn't not tell it was a baby. We couldn't see it but we could hear it. It was distressed,' Mr Otte said
 
'It was so intense; you couldn't not tell it was a baby. We couldn't see it but we could hear it. It was distressed,' Mr Otte said
 
Inspector David Lagats attended the scene and said that the baby estimated to be between two and three days old, and was malnourished, but appeared to have received medical assistance. It has since confirmed that the child was born on Monday, so was seven days old when it was found
 
Inspector David Lagats attended the scene and said that the baby estimated to be between two and three days old, and was malnourished, but appeared to have received medical assistance. It has since confirmed that the child was born on Monday, so was seven days old when it was found
 
Inspector Lagats said that the baby boy had no other obvious signs of injury but that he has been taken to Westmead Children's Hospital in a serious but stable condition for further tests
 
Inspector Lagats said that the baby boy had no other obvious signs of injury but that he has been taken to Westmead Children's Hospital in a serious but stable condition for further tests

With the mercury set to hit 40 degrees in the area on Sunday, he added that it was lucky that the baby was found quickly.

'The child was already undernourished and dehydration would have taken effect, so we held grave fears for the child's welfare if he was exposed to this weather,' he said.

The boy is currently under the care of the NSW Minister for Family and Community Services.

'We are really worried primarily for his welfare and mum's,' said Lisa Charet, the department's district director for Western Sydney, speaking before the child's mother was found.

'We really want mum to come forward so we can give her the help and support she needs - she must be feeling enormously distressed.

'Often, when this sort of thing happens, people are in a place of desperation.'

Ms Charet said such an incident was rare but 'it does happen' and that the mother must have been desperate if she was the person to commit the act.

'It is often fear that stops people coming forward but we are here to help,' Ms Charet said.

Karen Healy, National President of the Australian Association of Social Workers and Professor of Social Work at the University of Queensland said that this was a highly unusual case.

'Parents abandoning their child is extremely rare in any situation. There would be less than ten cases of outright abandonment across Australia each year, but even among these this is highly unusual,' Ms Healy said.

'Babies are generally left on church doorsteps or at hospitals, in high-traffic areas where the parents know someone will find them and take care of them,' she said.

'Typically, parents will abandon their baby because of a complete inability to take care of their child, and very often they are looking for someone else to care for child but don't want to be investigated.'

But this is quite a different scenario, and it's clear they wanted the baby hidden. There must be some element of shame, where their families weren't aware they were pregnant,' Ms Healy said.

'It has the hallmarks of mental illness or a serious drug addiction, and I can't think of another case like this.'

Last year, a baby boy was found abandoned at a residence in Kingston South in Brisbane, with a note asking the owners of the home to take care of the child, reported The ABC.

Ms Healy said she was a aware of another young woman from Ireland who abandoned her child last year, and in both cases their families were not aware of their pregnancies.

There have been multiple attempts by activist groups to implement strategies to prevent new mothers from abandoning or killing their babies.

15 countries around the world have implemented 'baby hatches', where children can be left in a 'window' anonymously for the state to deal with.

The US have also introduced 'baby haven' laws which enable a person to give up their child without fear of prosecution, as long as the child has not been harmed.

Correction: Due to a police error, an earlier version of this story incorrectly said the child's mother was aged 20. She is in fact 30-years-old.

Police also originally stated that the child was two to three days old. It has now been confirmed that the child was born on Monday and was seven days old when it was found. 
 
Spokesperson for the Minister for Family and Community Services, Leslie Charet, urged the mother of the baby to make herself known
 
Spokesperson for the Minister for Family and Community Services, Leslie Charet, urged the mother of the baby to make herself known
 
Karen Healy, National President of the Australian Association of Social Workers and Professor of Social Work at the University of Queensland said that this was a highly unusual case
 
Karen Healy, National President of the Australian Association of Social Workers and Professor of Social Work at the University of Queensland said that this was a highly unusual case

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.