More accuse doctor of baby trafficking

Updated: 2013-08-08 08:10

By Ma Lie in Xi'an (China Daily)

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 More accuse doctor of baby trafficking

Wang Yanyan (center) says she was tricked into giving up her twin babies by Zhang Suxia, an obstetrician at the Fuping Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital in Shaanxi province, who later sold them. Wu Jiang / for China Daily

A suspected baby trafficking case in Fuping county, Shaanxi province, continues to develop as more couples claim they were duped into giving up their newborn babies.

The county police confirmed on Wednesday that the parents of 10 children delivered at Fuping Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital have reported their babies were also taken away by Zhang Suxia, deputy director of the hospital's maternity department.

Wang Yanyan, a farmer in Fuping, said she gave birth twins on May 31 and was told by the doctor the babies suffered from "congenital diseases" and would not live past three years.

"She told us to give up the babies and never let us look at them," Wang said.

However, Wang said she had several prenatal checkups during her pregnancy and the results showed she and her fetuses were normal.

Dong Pengfei, a local farmer in the county's Xuezhen township, reported to police that his wife gave birth to a baby boy in the hospital in 2006 and the doctor said the newborn had congenital defects and persuaded the parents to give him up.

The doctor took the baby away without allowing the couple to see him.

Yang Jianlong, chief officer of the county criminal case department, said, "Because the cases reported to police mostly happened some time ago, the investigation will take some time."

Zhang, the 56-year-old doctor, is suspected of having persuaded couples to give up their babies over the past eight years.

She was exposed only recently when a couple became suspicious and reported her to the police.

On Monday, police located the couple's baby boy and returned him to his parents.

Lai Guofeng, the baby's father, said he is now concerned about his son's health and he has yet to decide whether to sue the hospital.

On the night of July 16, Lai's wife, Dong Shanshan, gave birth to a baby boy at the hospital. Zhang told them the child suffered from syphilis and hepatitis B transmitted from the mother and would not survive.

Zhang did not let the couple see their baby but said he had already been taken away.

Lai questioned the doctor's diagnosis and took his wife to another county hospital for syphilis and hepatitis B tests the following day. Two days later, the test results showed his wife was free of both diseases.

On July 20, Lai contacted police who investigated and found the baby in Henan province 20 days after he was born.

Zhang was detained by police and confessed she had sold the baby for 21,600 yuan ($3,500) to two people from Shanxi province in the early morning of July 17.

Police obtained surveillance video that showed Zhang took a baby out of the hospital.

Six suspects in the case have been detained.

The National Health and Family Planning Commission on Tuesday urged the Shaanxi Health Department to dismiss those responsible and improve the management of its medical system.

Mao Qun'an, spokesman for the state health authority, said leaders of the National Health and Family Planning Commission were closely following the case.

The Shaanxi health authority issued an emergency notice of safety inspections of the province's health system to improve its management.

Sun Zhenlin, deputy director of the health department, said the three top leaders of the Fuping hospital had been dismissed and Zhang's license had been revoked.

Guan Fangtian, who has worked as a midwife for 30 years in a hospital in Xi'an, capital of the province, said there were rules on how doctors and nurses dealt with newborn babies, even if the baby had medical issues or died.

"My hospital has strict regulations for the processing of dead babies, and babies with defects would also be sent to their parents without any private processing by the doctors and nurses," Guan said.

Yang said police had no information so far indicating that other doctors or nurses helped Zhang and there was no evidence her family members knew either.

"We are paying full attention to the reports of people who said their babies were also taken by Zhang, and we are continuing our investigation," Yang said.

malie@chinadaily.com.cn

(China Daily USA 08/08/2013 page4)

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