The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

How come nothing is being done to prevent this?

The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime : Parallels : NPR

Individual tragedies easily go unnoticed in Pakistan. People are too busy grappling with corruption, militant violence, poverty and an infrastructure so dysfunctional that everyone, everywhere endures daily power outages.

Ziaullah Khan and his wife, Shazia, are the victims of one of the cruelest crimes of all. Yet in this troubled land, they’re struggling to get anyone to listen — let alone help.

A Stolen Baby Boy

They’re a young couple, just starting out. She’s a teacher; he works in a print shop. They live in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad.

Just under four weeks ago, their first child, a boy, was born in the city’s biggest public hospital, the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS).

Pakistan is a patriarchal, gender-prejudiced, traditional society; first-born males are especially celebrated. The arrival of their baby was greeted with delight by the couple’s family.

“It was a moment of joy,” recalls Ziaullah. “Everyone came in with gifts for the baby. My sisters came to hospital wearing their wedding dresses.”

“You think of your child. You think about his future, the way you will bring him up. Then someone just steals him.”

  • Ziaullah Khan, whose infant son was stolen from the hospital

Their euphoria didn’t last long. Less than a day after the baby was born, he was stolen.

Ziaullah says a middle-aged woman, who’d been hanging around the maternity ward posing as a staffer, walked out with him in the middle of the night and disappeared.

Shazia was asleep, recovering from a cesarean section. She only spent a few hours cuddling her newborn son. Grief-stricken, she remembers him as “the most beautiful baby in the ward, and very healthy too.”

The hospital says there were no functioning CCTV cameras (these have since been installed, it says) and that security guards saw nothing. The couple dispute this. They suspect collusion by hospital staff, which the hospital denies.

Four weeks on, Shazia is still living in the ward; she refuses to leave until her boy is returned.

An ‘Insult To Humanity’

The family has set up a protest camp outside, covering windows and walls with signs appealing to the government, the hospital authorities and human rights organizations.
Pakistani soldiers escort students as they leave the Army Public School in Peshawar on Jan. 12. The school has reopened after last month’s attack by the Pakistani Taliban that killed more than 130, most of them teenage students.
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“Abduction of a child from an innocent mother is an insult to humanity,” reads one slogan.

This “insult to humanity” happens alarmingly often in Pakistan. NPR was unable to acquire reliable data on the exact number of babies stolen every year. Police unofficially say these abductions are fairly common. A newborn was stolen from the same hospital last year; its corpse was later found.

Police say there are many possible motives for this crime. Babies are sometimes snatched by gangs who make large sums of money by using tiny kids to beg on the streets.

These abductions are sometimes acts of revenge, say police. Sometimes they’re the result of family inheritance disputes (in feudal areas, the arrival of a newborn boy can mean someone else doesn’t inherit the farm, after all). And sometimes boys are abducted and switched with girls.

The most common explanation, though, is that babies are stolen for illicit sale to childless couples.

That’s what parliamentarian Zahid (Zahir) Khan thinks probably happened to Ziaullah and Shazia’s baby. He’s helping them pressure the authorities to track down their baby.

The most common explanation is that babies are stolen for illicit sale to childless couples.

Khan says, in practice, there is little to prevent criminals from selling someone’s baby to a childless couple.

"This is a failure of the state. There is no proper system of registration, so the thief will have the baby registered, saying, ‘He is my baby,’ " Khan says. “Nobody will demand a certificate from the doctor.”

Ongoing Protest And Pleas

Ziaullah and Shazia aren’t sure why their baby was abducted. They insist a family feud isn’t a factor. “I rule that out. No member of my family would do that,” says Shazia.

They, too, think the thieves probably intend to sell their boy to a childless couple. They also speculate that Islamist militants took him for future use as a suicide bomber — though officials consider this far-fetched.

The couple’s primary concern is not the motive. They simply want the return of their son.

“This is a very cruel society,” says Ziaullah, tearfully. “You think of your child. You think about his future, the way you will bring him up. Then someone just steals him.”

The couple say they’re willing to forgive the woman who abducted him, just so long as she gives back their baby.

Until they have their boy in their arms, Ziaullah and Shazia plan to carry on protesting at the hospital — refusing to leave and determined to make the world listen.

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

Oh my lord. Yeah this is true they have no security there.

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

Reminds me of the drama, Nanhi. It’s about stealing newborns. :confused:

Imagine wearing a Bunto bridal to a hospital. Just no. Although now me wonders if aunts would dress as fancy for the birth of a girl.

That’s so terrible… can’t imagine what the mother must be going thru. I hope they’re able to track the baby.

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

May Allah help them deal with this loss.

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

I can’t even imagine their pain. This is truly terrible. Tsk

May Allah make it easier on the family.

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

The ironic part of this entire coverage I see is that its actually highlighted by international media while the local one is buisy in wutever stuff. There is supposed to be a thorough campaign on this issue. Awareness as well as protests to concerned authorities. Otherwise just wait for more stories to come.

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

Have babies indoors? Maybe?

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

Nothing is being done about any thing. Pakistan is running organically.
A blessed country where people still get food to eat and some what live able society, even when the country is at its own.

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

It is a damn miracle this country is functioning at the level it is.

Re: The Theft Of An Infant Son: In Pakistan, A Not-Uncommon Crime

This is what I love about the article.

So you have no data and some how it happens alarmingly often. Mashallah. The author must but of the same intellectual capacity as some of the readers.