Thiruvananthapuram: After facing embarrassment over a ruling party leader being booked for kidnapping his grandchild, the Kerala government on Friday ordered a departmental probe into the incident even as the CPI(M) said it wants the mother to get her baby back.
The Women and Child Welfare Department would probe into the complaints from Anupama S Chandran against her father and CPI(M) local committee member P S Jayachandran regarding the alleged abduction and the abandonment of her baby in an electric cradle owned by the State Council for Child Welfare.
Veena George, State Minister for Women and Child Welfare, said the department secretary Rani George has been entrusted with the probe.
It was assumed that the grandfather had abandoned the infant in the electric cradle here, she said.
"Directions have been given to clearly examine whether all the mandatory procedures were followed after the child was received at the cradle by the Council. I have asked for a comprehensive report, which is expected soon," George told reporters here.
She said as per the records, the Council had received two children at its 'Ammathottil' (electric cradle) here during the period and the DNA test of one of the children had been carried out based on the complaint of the woman, but it had turned out to be negative.
Asked about the claim of Anupama's father that the baby was abandoned with the consent of his daughter, the Minister said if anybody wants to hand over a child to the Council legally, its mother should also be present in person before the panel.
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"What I understood was that in this case, nothing had happened like that. So, to ascertain the truth, the statements of several persons, including the then staff at the Council, have to be recorded," she said.
Extending support to Anupama, the Minister said it is the child's mother who is asking for her baby and what's most important for her is to get her child back.
Meanwhile, senior CPI(M) leader and party district secretary Anavoor Nagappan said the party has limitations in intervening in the matter as it involves legal implications.
He admitted that the woman had approached the leadership with the complaint seeking help to get her baby back some months back.
The woman was told that the issue could not be sorted out at the party-level and advised to go the legal way to get her baby back, he told the reporters here.
''The mother should get her baby...that is always the party's stand. I have informed Anupama that the issue could not be sorted out at the party-level and so we cannot intervene. I also offered her support if she goes the legal way,'' Nagappan said.