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Villagers rush to adopt abandoned baby in Ubon Ratchathani


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Posted

Villagers rush to adopt abandoned baby

By The Nation

 

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Picture: Manager

 

A newborn girl was found abandoned behind a resort in Ubon Ratchathani's Kut Khao Pun district on Thursday evening.
 

Villagers heard a baby crying and they traced the sound to the girl, who was wrapped in a piece of white cloth, in a tall grasses at 6.20 pm. The girl had apparently not yet been cleaned since being born and still had her umbilical cord attached.

 

Police rushed the girl to the district hospital, where she was found to weigh 2.7 kilograms and declared to be in good health.

 

Several local residents have informed the hospital that they would like to adopt the baby.

 

Police will check footage of security cameras in the area to try to locate the mother, who is believed to be a teenager, to provide counselling.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/breakingnews/30354943

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2018-09-21
Posted
14 minutes ago, Lupatria said:

the "family" demands pay back to them for their charitable deed

Nice family...
It is good to choose your own friends. FAMILY however - you are either born or married with.
 

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Posted (edited)
38 minutes ago, kcpattaya said:

Nice family...
It is good to choose your own friends. FAMILY however - you are either born or married with.
 

How true, at about 45 years old my father called his mother and said 'this is the last time you will ever hear from me and don't try to contact my wife or son.'

 

It broke his heart to make that call but I have every respect for his judgment and for him making that call. He put the phone down and reached out for his wife, and me. He cried his heart out.

 

His mother was a nasty belligerent person who had caused much trouble and heartache. She told a series of total lies which eventually caused the 2 break-ups between dads' brothers and their wives, she set out to break them up. When I was in Vietnam during the war she sent me a letter saying 'and what have you got to worry about my sons went to a real war' (a letter from an old lady I didn't really know, who I had never communicated with by mail,  and much earlier I had learned to stay away from her).  

 

 

Edited by scorecard

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