Japan has drop box for unwanted babies
TOKYO - A Japanese hospital opened the country's only anonymous drop box for unwanted infants Thursday despite government admonitions against abandoning babies.
A nurse carrying a baby doll demonstrates the Jikei Hospital's baby drop-off system as the new procedure is unveiled to the media in the southern city of Kumamoto, Japan, Tuesday, May 1, 2007. [AP] |
A small hatch on the side of the hospital allows people to drop off babies in an incubator 24 hours a day, while an alarm will notify hospital staff of the new arrival. The infants will initially be cared for by the hospital and then put up for adoption.
"We started the service but hope it won't be used," head nurse Yukiko Tajiri said. "I hope it is seen as a symbol that we are always here for parents to share their difficulty."
But government officials warned the service might only encourage more abandonments.
"In principle, parents should not abandon their babies anonymously," Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters Thursday. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki meanwhile said it was "fundamental for parents to raise their children with their own hands."
Similar baby drops exist in Germany and South Africa. Some US states, such as Alabama and Minnesota, also have programs protecting identities of women who give up their babies.
The drop box was set up after a series of high-profile cases in which newborn babies were abandoned in parks and supermarkets, triggering a public outcry.
Abortion is readily available and widespread in Japan where restriction against the measure is loose and there are no clear religious taboos.
Nearly 290,000 abortions were reported in 2005, according to the Health Ministry.
相关文章
- 欧美文化:Macron visits Berlin on first foreign trip after re-election
- 欧美文化:Ukrainian president, Swedish PM discuss defense support for Ukraine over phone
- 欧美文化:Two suspects arrested for killing 3 Israelis in stabbing attack
- 欧美文化:UN chief calls for end to "cycle of death, destruction" in Ukraine
- 欧美文化:U.S. secretary of state tests positive for COVID-19
- 欧美文化:Hungary "can't support" EU's new sanctions against Russia in current form:
- 欧美文化:Oil prices jump as EU aims for Russian oil ban
- 欧美文化:U.S. Fed on track for half-point rate hike as recession fears grow
- 欧美文化:Uzbek president appoints new acting foreign minister
- 欧美文化:Ukrainian, EU leaders discuss further support for Kiev